Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You’re exhausted, you finally lie down — and then your legs start. That crawling, creeping, aching, got-to-move feeling that no position can fix. You kick, you stretch, you pace the hallway at midnight, and you still can’t sleep. If this sounds familiar, you are not alone and you are not imagining it. Menopause restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a real, recognised condition, and the hormonal upheaval of menopause is a well-documented trigger. Nobody warned you this could happen — but it can, and it does.
This article explains exactly what’s going on in your body, why menopause makes it worse, and — most importantly — what can actually help.
What’s Actually Happening: The City That Never Gets to Sleep
Think of your nervous system as a city. At night, the city is supposed to wind down: traffic thins, signals dim, everything settles into a calm overnight rhythm. In restless legs syndrome, something keeps triggering the city’s movement signals — the traffic lights keep cycling, the road crews keep showing up — so your legs simply can’t get the “all clear” to rest.
The key player is dopamine, a chemical messenger that helps regulate muscle movement. When dopamine signalling is disrupted, the brain sends garbled movement signals to the legs, especially at night when other distractions aren’t drowning them out. Estrogen plays a role in supporting dopamine pathways. As estrogen falls during perimenopause and menopause, that dopamine regulation can become less steady — the city’s traffic control system gets glitchy — and RLS symptoms can emerge or worsen.
Iron deficiency is another major piece of the puzzle. Iron is essential for producing dopamine, and low iron stores (even without full anaemia) are strongly linked to RLS. Menopause-related changes in sleep, diet, and absorption can quietly erode iron levels, making the problem worse.
Why Menopause Specifically Makes Restless Legs Worse
RLS affects women at roughly twice the rate of men across the lifespan — and the risk rises sharply around menopause. Research published in journals including Sleep Medicine has noted a clear association between hormonal transition and worsening RLS symptoms. There are several reasons for this:
- Falling estrogen unsettles dopamine regulation, as described above.
- Disrupted sleep architecture — already fractured by hot flashes and night sweats — means you spend more time in the lighter sleep stages where RLS symptoms are most intrusive.
- Reduced magnesium levels, which can accompany the menopausal transition, may affect nerve and muscle signalling.
- Increased stress and anxiety, both common in perimenopause, are known to amplify RLS sensations.
It’s also worth knowing that certain medications sometimes prescribed during this life stage — including some antidepressants and antihistamines — can trigger or worsen RLS. This is worth flagging to your doctor if symptoms started after a new prescription.
What Does Menopause RLS Actually Feel Like?
The sensation is notoriously hard to describe, and that difficulty can make women feel they won’t be believed. Common descriptions include:
- Crawling or creeping under the skin
- An electric or fizzing feeling
- Aching or throbbing deep in the calves or thighs
- An overwhelming, irresistible urge to move — not pain exactly, but unbearable unless you do move
Crucially, it gets worse at rest and at night, and it temporarily improves with movement. That combination — worse when still, better when moving — is the hallmark of RLS and distinguishes it from other causes of leg discomfort like cramps or circulation issues. For more on how menopause disrupts sleep in multiple ways, see our guide on menopause and sleep problems.
What Gets Mistaken for RLS (and Vice Versa)
Because the symptoms are unusual and hard to articulate, RLS is frequently misdiagnosed — or dismissed entirely. It’s often confused with:
- Anxiety — the restlessness is real, but it’s physical in origin, not purely psychological
- Leg cramps — cramps cause sharp, sudden pain and don’t carry the urge-to-move quality
- Peripheral neuropathy — nerve damage from diabetes or other causes can mimic RLS, so a doctor should assess which is which
- Poor circulation — venous insufficiency causes discomfort but typically improves with elevation, whereas RLS does not
If you’ve been told “it’s just stress” or offered sleeping tablets without any investigation of the underlying cause, you have every right to ask for a more thorough assessment.
What Actually Helps
Lifestyle changes
- Iron check first. Ask your GP or doctor for a ferritin blood test — not just haemoglobin, but ferritin (stored iron). The Restless Legs Foundation notes that raising ferritin levels can significantly reduce symptoms in people who are deficient.
- Sleep hygiene matters more here than usual. A consistent bedtime, a cool room, and limiting screens before bed won’t cure RLS, but they reduce the fatigue that makes everything worse.
- Moderate, regular exercise — particularly walking and stretching — is associated with reduced symptom severity. Avoid intense evening workouts, which can temporarily worsen symptoms.
- Warm baths or cool compresses before bed help some women manage the sensation in the short term.
- Cut back on caffeine and alcohol, both of which are known to aggravate RLS.
Non-hormonal medical options
If iron deficiency is confirmed, supplementation (guided by a clinician) can make a meaningful difference. Magnesium supplementation is often discussed, and while evidence is limited, some women find it helpful — speak to a doctor before starting. According to the NHS, certain prescription medications that support dopamine signalling are used for moderate-to-severe RLS when lifestyle changes aren’t enough.
Hormonal options
Some women find that HRT — by stabilising estrogen levels — reduces the frequency and severity of menopause-related RLS. The Menopause Society notes that HRT can improve overall sleep quality in menopausal women, which in turn reduces how disruptive RLS feels. This isn’t a guaranteed fix, and HRT isn’t right for everyone, but it’s a conversation worth having. For a broader look at how hormones affect your body during this transition, our article on perimenopause symptoms may help you connect the dots.
If your symptoms overlap with mood changes, low energy, or brain fog, it’s also worth reading about menopause and anxiety — these threads are often connected.
When to See a Doctor
Please do seek medical advice if:
- Your symptoms are happening most nights and significantly disrupting sleep
- You haven’t had your ferritin (iron stores) tested
- The urge-to-move sensation is appearing during the day as well as at night
- You’re already taking antidepressants, antihistamines, or anti-nausea medications — your doctor may be able to adjust these
- Symptoms started or worsened suddenly — a clinician should rule out secondary causes
You deserve a proper assessment, not a dismissal. If your concern isn’t taken seriously, it is completely reasonable to ask for a second opinion or request a referral to a sleep specialist or neurologist.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can menopause cause restless legs syndrome?
Yes. Falling estrogen levels during menopause can disrupt dopamine regulation, which is closely linked to RLS. Women are already twice as likely as men to develop RLS, and the risk increases around perimenopause and menopause. It’s a recognised but underreported symptom of hormonal transition.
Will restless legs get better after menopause?
For some women, symptoms ease once hormones stabilise post-menopause. For others, RLS persists and needs ongoing management. There’s no single answer — which is why getting a proper diagnosis and identifying your specific triggers (like low iron) is so important rather than waiting it out.
Does HRT help restless legs in menopause?
Some women report improvement with HRT, likely because stabilising estrogen supports dopamine signalling and improves overall sleep. However, the evidence is not definitive, and HRT isn’t appropriate for everyone. It’s worth discussing with a menopause-specialist clinician as part of a wider symptom review.
What deficiency causes restless legs?
Iron deficiency — specifically low ferritin (stored iron) — is one of the most common and treatable causes of RLS. You can have low ferritin even if standard anaemia tests are normal. Ask your doctor specifically for a ferritin level test if you haven’t had one.
Is restless legs syndrome a sleep disorder?
RLS is classified as both a neurological and a sleep disorder because, while it originates in the nervous system, its primary impact is on sleep. It belongs in a different category from insomnia, but the two frequently coexist — especially in menopausal women dealing with multiple sleep disruptors at once.
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.