Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You’re fine — genuinely fine — and then a car commercial comes on, or a colleague says something kind, or you hear a song you haven’t thought about in years, and suddenly you’re crying. Not a gentle welling-up. A proper, inexplicable, ambush-level cry. And the worst part isn’t the tears; it’s not knowing where they came from. Menopause crying spells feel random, embarrassing, and — if no one has named them for you — genuinely frightening. You are not losing your mind. You are not “too emotional.” Your brain chemistry has changed, and there’s a very real explanation for what’s happening.
What’s Actually Happening: The Weather Inside Your Brain
Think of your emotional state as local weather. Normally, estrogen acts like a stable high-pressure system — it keeps the atmosphere calm and predictable. During perimenopause and menopause, estrogen levels don’t just fall; they fluctuate wildly before they fall, the way a stormy front passes through before a cold, clear day settles in.
Estrogen has a direct relationship with serotonin and norepinephrine — the neurotransmitters that regulate mood and emotional resilience. When estrogen surges and dips unpredictably, those chemical “pressure systems” shift fast. The result? Sudden squalls of emotion with no obvious trigger. The Menopause Society notes that mood symptoms, including tearfulness and irritability, are among the most common and disruptive complaints women report during the menopause transition.
Progesterone matters here too. Its calming, GABA-boosting effect diminishes in perimenopause, removing another layer of emotional insulation. Poor sleep — itself driven by hormonal disruption — makes the whole system more reactive. One bad night can lower your emotional threshold dramatically, so the next morning even a lukewarm coffee feels devastating.
Why the Crying Feels So Sudden and So Disproportionate
The hallmark of menopausal crying spells is the gap between the trigger and the response. The trigger is tiny; the response is enormous. That gap is what makes women feel “crazy” — and it’s worth understanding why it exists.
When estrogen fluctuates, the amygdala (the brain’s threat-detection centre) becomes hyperreactive. It fires faster and louder than usual. At the same time, the prefrontal cortex — the part that says “steady on, it’s just a commercial” — has less hormonal support to dampen that signal. So the emotional squall hits before your rational brain has time to open an umbrella.
This is not weakness. This is altered neurochemistry. The same woman who sailed through decades of high-pressure situations without cracking is now crying at a supermarket loyalty card advert — not because she’s fragile, but because the wiring in her brain is working under genuinely different conditions.
What Else Can Look Like This (and What to Rule Out)
Sudden tearfulness in midlife has a few possible contributors, and they often overlap:
- Perimenopause vs. menopause: Crying spells are often more intense during perimenopause, when hormones are most erratic, than after menopause, when levels stabilise at a lower baseline. If your cycles are still irregular, you’re likely in perimenopause.
- Thyroid dysfunction: Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism can cause mood instability and tearfulness. Because thyroid problems peak in midlife women and share symptoms with perimenopause, it’s worth asking your GP for a thyroid function test.
- Clinical depression: Hormonal tearfulness tends to come in spells — you feel okay, then you don’t, then you do again. Persistent low mood, loss of interest in things you used to enjoy, or feelings of hopelessness that don’t lift are signs that something more than hormone fluctuation may be at play, and that conversation with your doctor becomes urgent. If you are struggling with dark thoughts, please reach out to a mental health professional or contact a crisis line.
- Life circumstances: Perimenopause often arrives alongside significant life stressors — aging parents, changing relationships, career transitions. Hormones and life events pile on each other, and untangling them takes honest reflection and, sometimes, professional support.
If mood swings feel less like crying and more like rage, you might find it useful to read about menopause anger and irritability — the same hormonal storm, a different emotional flavour.
What Actually Helps
Lifestyle changes with real evidence behind them
- Prioritise sleep ruthlessly. Sleep deprivation amplifies every emotional response. Addressing the hormonal sleep disruption — whether through sleep hygiene, CBT-I (cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia), or, if appropriate, medical treatment — has a knock-on effect on daytime tearfulness.
- Regular aerobic exercise. According to the NHS, regular moderate exercise supports mood by boosting endorphins and improving sleep quality. Even three brisk 30-minute walks a week can make a measurable difference.
- Blood sugar stability. Skipping meals or riding a sugar spike-and-crash rollercoaster makes emotional reactivity significantly worse. Eating regular, protein-containing meals helps keep the emotional weather steadier.
Non-hormonal options
- CBT and mindfulness-based therapies have good evidence for mood symptoms in menopause. They don’t stop the squall, but they help you not be swept away by it. The Menopause Society supports CBT as a first-line option for mood-related symptoms.
- SSRIs and SNRIs — certain antidepressants that act on serotonin and norepinephrine — can be genuinely effective for mood instability even when clinical depression isn’t the primary diagnosis. A GP or menopause specialist can discuss whether this fits your picture.
Hormonal options
- HRT (hormone replacement therapy) addresses the root cause — the estrogen fluctuation — and for many women produces a marked improvement in mood symptoms, including crying spells. This is a conversation to have with a menopause-informed clinician who can weigh your individual history. You can read a broader overview of HRT and how it works to go into that conversation better prepared.
It’s also worth understanding how crying spells relate to the wider picture of mood changes during menopause — because tearfulness rarely travels alone.
When to See a Doctor
Make an appointment if:
- Crying spells are happening daily or are disrupting your work, relationships, or ability to function.
- You feel persistently low, hopeless, or no longer like yourself for more than two weeks.
- You are having any thoughts of harming yourself — please seek help immediately.
- You want to explore HRT, antidepressants, or therapy referrals.
- You haven’t had thyroid function or hormone levels checked and want a baseline.
When you see your doctor, you’re entitled to say: “I’m having sudden, intense crying episodes that feel out of proportion. I’d like to explore whether this is hormonal and what my options are.” That’s a complete, reasonable thing to ask — and a menopause-informed clinician will take it seriously.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is sudden crying a normal symptom of menopause?
Yes. Sudden, disproportionate crying spells are a recognised and common symptom of perimenopause and menopause. They’re driven by fluctuating estrogen levels affecting the brain chemicals that regulate mood and emotional resilience. You are not imagining it, and you are not “too sensitive.”
Will the crying spells stop after menopause?
For many women, acute crying spells do ease once hormone levels stabilise post-menopause. The erratic fluctuations of perimenopause are often the most emotionally turbulent phase. That said, if low mood persists after the transition, it warrants its own assessment and treatment.
Can HRT help with menopause crying spells?
For many women, yes. Because HRT addresses the underlying hormonal fluctuation, it can significantly reduce mood symptoms including tearfulness. It isn’t right for everyone, so a menopause-informed clinician is the right person to help you decide whether it’s appropriate for you.
Why do I cry over tiny things during menopause?
Fluctuating estrogen makes the brain’s emotional alarm system — the amygdala — more reactive, while reducing the calming signals that normally keep responses proportionate. The trigger may be small, but the brain is temporarily wired to respond as though it isn’t. It’s neurochemistry, not character.
How is menopausal tearfulness different from depression?
Hormonal tearfulness tends to come in unpredictable spells between periods of feeling normal. Depression typically involves a persistent, unlifting low mood, loss of enjoyment, and feelings of hopelessness. They can coexist, and both deserve treatment — so if you’re unsure, talk to your doctor rather than waiting it out.
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.