Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You’re standing in the supplement aisle, overwhelmed by rows of bottles all promising to fix the sleep, the mood swings, the brain fog, and the hot flashes that have quietly taken over your life. Or maybe a friend swears by a particular brand and you’re wondering whether it’s worth trying. If you’re in perimenopause and searching for answers, you are absolutely not alone — and the question of perimenopause supplements is one of the most common ones women bring to us.
The honest truth is: some supplements have decent evidence behind them, some have very little, and some work beautifully for certain women and not at all for others. This article walks you through what’s actually known, what women commonly experience, and how to make a genuinely informed choice — rather than just hoping for the best.
What’s Actually Happening in Your Body During Perimenopause
Think of your hormonal system as a garden that’s been tended reliably for decades. Estrogen and progesterone have been the gardeners — regulating your sleep, your mood, your bone density, your temperature control, your gut, your skin. During perimenopause, those gardeners start to show up less predictably. Some days the garden looks fine; other days it’s overrun or parched.
Supplements can’t replace the gardeners. But some of them act like good mulch or steady watering — they support the soil conditions so the garden copes better with the unpredictability. Understanding that framing matters, because it sets realistic expectations: supplements are supportive, not curative.
The Supplements with the Most Evidence
Magnesium
Magnesium is probably the supplement with the broadest real-world payoff for perimenopausal women. It’s involved in over 300 enzymatic processes in the body, and many women are mildly deficient without knowing it. According to the NHS, magnesium contributes to normal psychological function and the reduction of tiredness and fatigue. Women commonly report improved sleep quality and fewer nighttime wake-ups within a few weeks of supplementing — which, when you’re dealing with disrupted sleep, feels enormous. It won’t eliminate hot flashes, but the knock-on effect of sleeping better tends to make everything else more manageable. Magnesium glycinate or magnesium bisglycinate are generally better tolerated than magnesium oxide.
Vitamin D
Declining estrogen accelerates bone density loss during perimenopause, and vitamin D is essential for calcium absorption. The NHS recommends that most adults in the UK consider a daily vitamin D supplement, particularly in autumn and winter. Low vitamin D is also associated with low mood and fatigue — two things perimenopause already tends to worsen. Getting levels checked via a simple blood test before supplementing is a good idea, since the right dose varies significantly from person to person.
Omega-3 Fatty Acids
Several studies suggest omega-3s may help reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes, as well as supporting mood and cardiovascular health — both relevant as estrogen’s protective cardiovascular effects wane. The Menopause Society notes that omega-3s have a reasonable evidence base for mood support during the menopause transition. Many women also notice improvements in joint comfort and skin texture. Fish oil or algae-based omega-3 (if you’re plant-based) are the common forms.
B Vitamins (especially B6 and B12)
B vitamins are involved in neurotransmitter production — serotonin, dopamine, GABA — which partly explains why B6 in particular has some evidence for supporting mood and reducing irritability. B12 matters for energy and cognitive function, and absorption can decrease with age. If brain fog is your dominant symptom, it’s worth having B12 levels checked. You can read more about how brain fog during perimenopause actually feels and what drives it — it’s one of the least talked-about symptoms and one of the most distressing.
Herbal Supplements: Promising but Patchy
Black Cohosh
Black cohosh is probably the most researched herbal supplement for hot flashes and night sweats. The evidence is genuinely mixed — some trials show meaningful reduction in vasomotor symptoms, others show modest effects comparable to placebo. What most women find is that it’s worth a 8–12 week trial if you’re keen to avoid hormonal options, but it’s not a guaranteed fix. It should not be taken if you have a history of liver problems, and it’s worth telling your doctor you’re taking it.
Ashwagandha
Ashwagandha (an adaptogen) is increasingly popular for stress and sleep during perimenopause. Some small trials show it can reduce cortisol levels and support sleep quality. The evidence base is still building, but many women report it’s one of the more noticeable additions to their routine for managing anxiety and overwhelm. If anxiety is something you’re wrestling with, our piece on anxiety during perimenopause and what’s really behind it is worth a read alongside this one.
Phytoestrogens (Red Clover, Soy Isoflavones)
Phytoestrogens are plant compounds that weakly mimic estrogen in the body. Red clover and soy isoflavones are the most studied, and results vary widely between women — likely because how your gut metabolises them differs based on your microbiome. For some women they meaningfully reduce hot flashes; for others, very little changes. If you have a history of hormone-sensitive conditions, speak to your doctor before trying these.
What Women Actually Notice: The Real Experience
Women who supplement during perimenopause typically describe the experience as gradual and cumulative rather than dramatic. The most consistent reports are: better sleep quality with magnesium, slightly improved mood and energy with B vitamins and vitamin D, and reduced hot flash frequency (not elimination) with omega-3s or herbal options after consistent use over weeks.
What women also report is that supplements rarely work in isolation. The ones who feel the most benefit tend to be combining supplementation with decent sleep hygiene, reduced alcohol intake, and movement — not because supplements need help to “work,” but because the garden analogy holds: even the best mulch can’t compensate for a drought. For a fuller picture of what supports the whole transition, it’s worth exploring the full range of treatment options in perimenopause — from lifestyle changes to medical support.
What Actually Helps: A Practical Approach
- Start with one or two, not ten. If you introduce multiple supplements at once, you won’t know what’s helping. Start with magnesium and vitamin D — the two with the strongest general evidence and lowest risk — and give them 4–6 weeks before adding anything else.
- Quality matters. Supplement manufacturing is not tightly regulated. Look for brands that carry third-party testing certification (NSF, USP, or similar). Cheaper isn’t always worse, but unverified products can be underdosed or contaminated.
- Timing matters too. Magnesium is generally best taken in the evening. Fat-soluble vitamins (D, omega-3s) are better absorbed with food. B vitamins can be energising, so morning is preferable for most.
- Keep a simple symptom log. A notes app works perfectly. Rate sleep, mood, and your main symptom on a simple 1–5 scale each morning. After six weeks, you’ll have actual data rather than impressions.
- Tell your doctor what you’re taking. Some supplements interact with medications — St John’s Wort being the most significant example, with documented interactions with contraceptives and antidepressants.
When to See a Doctor
Supplements are a reasonable part of managing perimenopause symptoms, but they shouldn’t be used as a reason to avoid a medical conversation. Please see your GP or a menopause specialist if:
- Your symptoms are significantly affecting your daily life, work, or relationships
- You have severe or persistent low mood, especially if it tips into hopelessness — this needs professional support, not just supplementation
- You have a history of cancer (especially hormone-sensitive), liver disease, or blood clotting disorders before starting herbal supplements
- You’re on any regular prescription medication — check for interactions first
- Symptoms haven’t improved after a genuine trial of lifestyle and supplementation — because HRT and other medical options exist and may be the right answer for you
According to The Menopause Society, no complementary or alternative therapy has been shown to be as effective as HRT for moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms — and that’s a fact worth having before you invest months in supplements alone.
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.