Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You haven’t changed what you eat. You’re moving your body the same way you always have. And yet your clothes feel different, your energy is lower, and the number on the scale keeps creeping up. If you’ve been quietly blaming yourself, please stop — because perimenopause metabolism changes are real, measurable, and biological. This is not a willpower problem. This is your hormones reshaping the way your body runs its engine, and nobody warned you it was coming.
In this post, we’ll explain exactly what’s happening inside your body during perimenopause, why your metabolic rate declines, and — crucially — what the evidence actually says will help.
What’s Actually Happening: The Factory Analogy
Think of your metabolism as a large factory that runs around the clock, converting fuel (food) into energy, heat, and all the materials your body needs to function. For most of your adult life, estrogen has been the factory’s operations manager — keeping the furnaces running efficiently, directing where energy gets stored versus burned, and making sure the building’s infrastructure (your muscle mass) stays well-maintained.
In perimenopause, estrogen levels begin to fluctuate and, over time, decline. The operations manager is now showing up unpredictably, sometimes not at all. Without consistent estrogen signalling, the factory’s furnaces run at a lower output, shifts get shorter, and the maintenance crew starts letting muscle tissue — the metabolically expensive equipment that burns the most fuel — fall into disrepair. Fat storage, particularly around the abdomen, becomes the factory’s default mode because it’s a more “economical” way to hold energy reserves when the manager isn’t reliably in charge.
The result? Your body burns fewer calories at rest, stores fat more readily, and the shift in body composition feels like it happened almost overnight. According to The Menopause Society, the hormonal changes of perimenopause and menopause are directly linked to shifts in body composition, including decreased lean muscle mass and increased central adiposity.
Why Muscle Mass Is the Missing Piece of the Conversation
Most conversations about perimenopause weight gain focus on what you’re eating. Far fewer focus on what you’re losing: muscle. Muscle tissue is metabolically active — it burns calories even when you’re sitting still. As estrogen declines, the body becomes less efficient at building and maintaining muscle, a process called anabolic resistance.
This means two things are happening simultaneously: the factory is burning less fuel overall, and you’re losing some of the equipment that does the burning. It’s a compounding effect, and it’s why even a modest change in body composition during perimenopause can feel so dramatic compared to what you experienced in your thirties.
This is also why exercise advice that focuses only on cardio often falls short during this stage. Cardiovascular exercise is valuable, but without resistance or strength training, you’re not addressing the muscle-loss side of the equation.
The Insulin Connection: Why Carbohydrates Feel Different Now
Many women notice that foods they’ve always eaten — a bowl of pasta, a slice of bread, even fruit — seem to “hit differently” in perimenopause. This isn’t imagination. Estrogen plays a role in insulin sensitivity, and as levels fluctuate, cells can become less responsive to insulin’s signal to take up glucose from the bloodstream.
When cells are less insulin-sensitive, more glucose stays in circulation, and the body is more likely to convert excess energy to fat — particularly visceral fat around the abdomen. The NHS notes that this type of central weight gain carries its own health considerations, which is why understanding and managing it matters beyond aesthetics. You can read more about how these shifts connect to blood sugar changes during perimenopause for a deeper look at this mechanism.
Sleep, Stress, and the Cortisol Factor
Perimenopause doesn’t just change your hormones in isolation — it changes the entire hormonal ecosystem. Poor sleep (itself a common perimenopause symptom) raises cortisol, the body’s primary stress hormone. Elevated cortisol signals the body to hold onto fat, particularly around the middle, and can increase appetite — especially cravings for high-carbohydrate, high-fat foods.
If you’re also experiencing perimenopause-related sleep disruption, you may be caught in a cycle where broken sleep drives cortisol higher, which makes fat storage easier and weight management harder. Addressing sleep is therefore not a “nice to have” — it is a direct metabolic intervention.
What Actually Helps
Lifestyle: movement that matches your new biology
- Prioritise resistance training. Lifting weights, bodyweight exercises, resistance bands — two to three sessions a week is the most evidence-supported way to preserve and rebuild muscle during perimenopause, which directly counteracts metabolic rate decline.
- Don’t abandon cardio — but reframe it. Moderate-intensity cardio supports cardiovascular and metabolic health. High-intensity interval training (HIIT) has shown promise in some research for improving insulin sensitivity, though it isn’t suited to everyone.
- Prioritise sleep. Even modest improvements in sleep quality can reduce cortisol and improve the body’s ability to regulate appetite and energy use.
Nutrition: working with your metabolism, not against it
- Increase protein. Adequate protein intake helps preserve muscle mass and has a higher thermic effect than fat or carbohydrate (meaning the body burns more energy just digesting it). Most women in perimenopause benefit from consciously increasing protein at each meal.
- Don’t drastically cut calories. Very low-calorie diets signal the factory to slow production even further — the body interprets severe restriction as famine and reduces metabolic output. Eating enough, with good nutritional quality, is more metabolically supportive than aggressive restriction.
- Be thoughtful about refined carbohydrates. This doesn’t mean eliminating carbs — it means choosing higher-fibre, less-processed sources that cause a gentler rise in blood glucose, which is particularly relevant given the insulin sensitivity changes described above.
Medical options
- Hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Evidence suggests that HRT — particularly estrogen — can help attenuate the metabolic changes associated with perimenopause, including changes in body composition. The Menopause Society supports discussing HRT as a valid option for many women experiencing perimenopausal symptoms. A clinician decides whether it’s appropriate, and in what form, for you individually. You can also explore how HRT is approached in perimenopause for more context on the conversation to have with your doctor.
- Thyroid assessment. Thyroid dysfunction becomes more common around perimenopause and produces very similar symptoms — fatigue, weight gain, feeling cold, brain fog. If you haven’t had your thyroid checked, ask your doctor, as this is a treatable and frequently missed co-contributor.
When to See a Doctor
Speak to a healthcare professional if:
- Your weight is increasing rapidly and unexpectedly, despite no lifestyle changes
- You’re experiencing significant fatigue, cold intolerance, or hair thinning alongside metabolic changes (possible thyroid involvement)
- You have a personal or family history of type 2 diabetes and are noticing new symptoms around blood sugar regulation
- The metabolic changes are significantly affecting your quality of life, mood, or physical wellbeing
- You want to discuss whether HRT or other medical support is right for you
You deserve to be taken seriously in this conversation. If your concerns are being dismissed, it is entirely appropriate to seek a second opinion or ask for a referral to a menopause specialist.
Frequently Asked Questions
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.