Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
One week you can’t go at all. The next, you can’t stray far from the bathroom. If your bowel habits have become unpredictable, erratic, and frankly exhausting since perimenopause or menopause began, you are not alone — and you are not imagining it. Menopause constipation and diarrhea swings are a recognised gut response to hormonal change, and the fact that almost no one warns women about this is, frankly, a problem we’d like to fix right now.
This article explains exactly why your gut is behaving this way, what makes the swings worse, and — most importantly — what you can actually do to bring things back to something resembling normal.
What’s Actually Happening: Your Gut as a River
Think of your digestive system as a river. When everything is in balance, the current flows at a steady, reliable pace — water moves through, the banks hold, and the whole system works without drama. Estrogen and progesterone are two of the key forces that regulate that current.
Estrogen helps keep the gut lining healthy and influences how quickly food moves through your intestines — a quality called gut motility. Progesterone, when it rises and falls, has a relaxing effect on smooth muscle, including the muscle of your bowel wall. During perimenopause and menopause, both hormones fluctuate wildly before they eventually decline. The result? Your river loses its banks. Sometimes the current slows to a near-standstill (constipation). Other times it rushes through too fast (diarrhea, urgency, loose stools). Sometimes both happen in the same week.
According to the Menopause Society, the gut-hormone connection is well established: estrogen receptors exist throughout the gastrointestinal tract, and when estrogen levels fall, gut function is genuinely affected. This isn’t stress. It isn’t a sensitive stomach. It’s hormones, and your gut is listening.
Why the Swings Happen — Not Just One Direction
Many women expect menopause to cause one gut problem, not both. The reason you get the see-saw is that hormones don’t drop in a straight line — they fluctuate. A surge of estrogen can speed up gut motility and trigger loose stools; a dip slows everything down and brings on constipation. The gut’s own nervous system (the enteric nervous system, sometimes called the “second brain”) is exquisitely sensitive to these hormonal shifts, which is why your bowel habits can change from day to day.
There’s also the cortisol connection. Disrupted sleep — itself a classic menopause symptom — raises cortisol, and elevated cortisol is well known to irritate the gut. If you’re waking at 3am with night sweats, your stress hormones are already elevated by morning, and your digestive system feels it. You can learn more about how sleep disruption in menopause affects the whole body — the gut is just one of its many downstream targets.
Other Factors That Make It Worse
The gut microbiome shifts
Research published in journals including Cell Host & Microbe suggests that estrogen influences the diversity of the gut microbiome — the trillions of bacteria that regulate digestion, immunity, and even mood. As estrogen declines, microbial diversity can fall, making the gut less resilient and more reactive to foods it previously handled well.
Dietary changes and reduced hydration
Many women in midlife are eating less (appetite shifts are common) and may be drinking less water without realising it. Both dry out the gut contents and slow motility. Some find they’ve quietly reduced fibre, or that foods they’ve always eaten — dairy, gluten, caffeine — suddenly provoke symptoms. This isn’t intolerance in the clinical sense; it’s a more sensitive gut that needs more care.
Thyroid changes
Worth knowing: the thyroid often becomes less stable around menopause, and both an underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism) and an overactive one (hyperthyroidism) directly affect bowel habits in the same opposing ways — constipation and diarrhea respectively. If your gut symptoms are severe or persistent, thyroid function should be checked. This overlaps with other menopause symptoms that are often mistaken for something else entirely.
What Actually Helps
Lifestyle changes (start here)
- Consistent, adequate fibre: Aim for a mix of soluble fibre (oats, flaxseed, cooked vegetables) and insoluble fibre (wholegrains, skins of fruit and veg). Soluble fibre absorbs water and bulks stools; insoluble fibre keeps things moving. The NHS recommends 30g of fibre per day for adults — most of us get around half that.
- Water, consistently: Fibre without fluid can make constipation worse. Sipping water steadily throughout the day rather than gulping large amounts is better for gut stability.
- Regular movement: Walking is genuinely effective at stimulating gut motility. Even 20–30 minutes daily makes a measurable difference to bowel regularity, according to NHS guidance.
- Timed eating: Eating at consistent times helps regulate the gut’s own rhythm. Skipping meals or eating erratically amplifies the chaos.
Non-hormonal options
- Probiotics: Evidence is still emerging, but some strains — particularly Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species — have shown benefit for bowel regularity and reducing diarrhea episodes in studies. Worth discussing with your GP or a registered dietitian.
- Magnesium: Low magnesium is extremely common in midlife women and is associated with constipation. Foods rich in magnesium include leafy greens, nuts, seeds, and dark chocolate. Supplements should be discussed with a clinician — magnesium citrate in particular is sometimes used for constipation, but dosing matters.
- Stress management: Because cortisol drives gut reactivity, anything that genuinely lowers your stress response — whether that’s mindfulness, yoga, therapy, or simply protecting sleep — has a real downstream effect on digestion.
Medical options
If lifestyle changes aren’t enough, speak to your doctor about:
- HRT (hormone replacement therapy): For women whose gut symptoms are part of a broader menopause picture, HRT can help restore the hormonal stability the gut depends on. It’s not the right choice for everyone, but for many women it genuinely settles digestive chaos along with other symptoms. Your clinician will discuss the appropriate type and route for you.
- Gut-directed treatments: Short-term use of stool softeners or anti-diarrheal medication may be appropriate in specific situations — a clinician will advise on what fits your pattern.
It’s also worth reading about bloating in menopause and what drives it — bloating often accompanies these bowel swings and shares some of the same root causes.
When to See a Doctor
Most menopausal gut changes are uncomfortable rather than dangerous, but some symptoms should always be investigated promptly. Please see your GP if you notice:
- Blood in your stool or rectal bleeding
- Unexplained significant weight loss
- Bowel changes that are new, persistent (more than a few weeks), and not responding to any lifestyle measures
- Severe abdominal pain
- Alternating constipation and diarrhea that fits a pattern — this can overlap with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), which is also more common in midlife women and deserves its own diagnosis and management plan
- A family history of bowel cancer — in which case, don’t delay a conversation with your GP
You know your body. If something feels wrong beyond ordinary digestive grumbling, trust that instinct and get it checked.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it normal to have both constipation and diarrhea during menopause?
Yes — and it’s more common than most women realise. Fluctuating estrogen and progesterone affect gut motility in both directions, so the pattern can swing week to week or even day to day. It’s a genuine hormonal effect, not a coincidence or anxiety.
Can HRT help with menopause-related bowel problems?
For some women, yes. By stabilising estrogen levels, HRT can reduce the hormonal swings that drive gut chaos. It isn’t prescribed specifically for digestive symptoms, but many women report improvement as part of broader symptom relief. Talk to your GP or menopause specialist.
Could my menopause gut symptoms actually be IBS?
They could be both — IBS is more prevalent in women and often worsens around perimenopause. The symptoms overlap significantly. A GP can help distinguish between the two, and the management strategies (fibre, hydration, stress reduction, probiotics) are largely complementary either way.
Why does my gut seem sensitive to foods it never bothered me before?
Falling estrogen alters the gut microbiome and reduces the resilience of the gut lining, making it more reactive. Foods like dairy, caffeine, and highly processed carbohydrates are common culprits in midlife. A food and symptom diary can help you identify your specific triggers.
How long do menopause bowel symptoms typically last?
There’s no single answer — it depends on how long your hormonal transition takes and whether it’s treated. Some women find symptoms settle within a year or two of reaching full menopause; others need longer-term management. Working with your GP or a menopause specialist gives you the best chance of finding stability sooner.
This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.