Exercise and Menopause: What the Evidence Says Works
If there were a single intervention that could address weight gain, bone loss, mood changes, sleep disruption, cardiovascular risk, and brain fog during menopause, you would want to know about it. Exercise is that intervention. But the type of exercise matters, and what worked in your 30s may not be the best approach in your 40s and 50s.
This is what the research shows about exercise during the menopausal transition: what works, what doesn't work as well as you might expect, and how to build a sustainable routine that serves your changing body.
What changes during menopause that affects exercise
The hormonal shifts of menopause create several changes that are directly relevant to exercise:
- Muscle mass declines. Oestrogen plays a role in maintaining muscle tissue. Its decline contributes to sarcopenia (age-related muscle loss), which accelerates during and after menopause.
- Body composition shifts. Even without weight gain, the proportion of fat to muscle changes. Fat tends to redistribute to the abdomen.
- Bone density decreases. Oestrogen's protective effect on bone diminishes, making weight-bearing exercise more important than ever.
- Recovery takes longer. Joint stiffness, inflammation, and slower tissue repair can make high-impact or high-volume exercise harder to recover from.
- Cardiovascular risk increases. The protective effects of oestrogen on blood vessels and lipids decline, making cardiovascular fitness a health priority rather than just a fitness goal.
Strength training: the most underrated tool
If there is one change to make to your exercise routine during menopause, this is it. Strength training (resistance training) addresses the most critical changes of menopause more effectively than any other type of exercise.
muscle mass lost per decade after age 30, accelerating after menopause
Source: Volpi E et al., Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care, 2004
What the research shows
- Preserves and builds muscle. Resistance training is the only reliable way to counter sarcopenia. Maintaining muscle mass supports metabolism, mobility, and independence.
- Protects bone density. Weight-bearing exercise and resistance training stimulate bone remodelling. Studies have shown that regular strength training can slow bone loss and, in some cases, modestly increase bone density at the hip and spine.
- Improves body composition. Strength training shifts the fat-to-muscle ratio favourably, even when the number on the scales doesn't change.
- Supports metabolic health. More muscle means a higher resting metabolic rate. Strength training also improves insulin sensitivity, helping your body process carbohydrates more effectively.
- Reduces joint pain. Counter-intuitively, strengthening the muscles around joints can reduce joint pain and stiffness, a common perimenopausal complaint.
How to start
If you are new to strength training, you do not need to start with heavy weights or complex programmes. Here are practical guidelines:
- Begin with 2-3 sessions per week. This is sufficient to see meaningful results.
- Focus on compound movements. Exercises that work multiple muscle groups are most efficient: squats, deadlifts, rows, presses, and lunges.
- Progressive overload. Gradually increase weight, reps, or sets over time. Your body adapts to a given stimulus, so you need to progressively challenge it.
- Consider working with a personal trainer. Even a few sessions to learn proper form can prevent injury and build confidence.
- Don't fear heavy weights. Women do not "bulk up" from lifting heavy. The hormonal environment after menopause makes this even less likely. Lifting challenging weights is what stimulates bone and muscle adaptation.
Cardiovascular exercise
Cardio remains important during menopause, but for different reasons than it may have been in your 20s and 30s. The primary goals shift from weight management to cardiovascular health protection and symptom management.
What the evidence says
- Heart health. Regular aerobic exercise improves cardiovascular fitness, reduces blood pressure, improves cholesterol profiles, and reduces the risk of heart disease, which becomes the leading cause of death in postmenopausal women.
- Hot flushes. The evidence on whether exercise reduces hot flushes is mixed. Some studies show a benefit, while others do not. However, regular exercisers generally report better management of vasomotor symptoms, possibly through improved thermoregulation.
- Mood and anxiety. Aerobic exercise has robust evidence for improving mood and reducing anxiety. It increases serotonin and endorphin production and has been shown to be as effective as medication for mild to moderate depression in some studies.
- Sleep. Regular exercise improves sleep quality, though exercising too close to bedtime can have the opposite effect.
- Brain health. Aerobic exercise increases blood flow to the brain and has been associated with better cognitive function and reduced risk of cognitive decline.
Types and amounts
NHS guidelines recommend at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity aerobic exercise per week. Effective options include:
- Brisk walking. The simplest and most accessible form of exercise. A daily 30-minute walk provides significant benefits.
- Swimming and water aerobics. Excellent for women with joint pain, though not weight-bearing for bone health.
- Cycling. Good cardiovascular exercise, though not weight-bearing.
- Dancing. Weight-bearing, social, cognitively engaging, and fun.
- Hiking. Combines cardiovascular benefits with weight-bearing impact and nature exposure.
- High-intensity interval training (HIIT). Short bursts of intense effort followed by recovery periods. Effective and time-efficient, but recovery may take longer during menopause. Start cautiously.
The weight loss question
Many women turn to exercise primarily for weight management during menopause. The evidence here is important to understand clearly.
Exercise alone is generally not sufficient for significant weight loss. Research consistently shows that diet plays a larger role in weight loss than exercise. However, exercise is critical for weight maintenance, body composition improvement, and preventing the abdominal fat accumulation that poses the greatest health risk.
The most effective approach combines dietary adjustments with exercise. Strength training, in particular, helps maintain muscle mass during weight loss, which is essential because muscle loss during dieting further reduces metabolic rate.
Flexibility and mobility
Joint stiffness and decreased flexibility are common during menopause, partly due to declining oestrogen's effects on connective tissue. Regular flexibility and mobility work can help:
- Yoga. Has been studied specifically in menopausal women. Research shows benefits for stress reduction, sleep quality, mood, and flexibility. Some studies suggest modest benefits for hot flushes as well.
- Stretching. Daily stretching, even for 10-15 minutes, can reduce stiffness and improve range of motion.
- Pilates. Strengthens core muscles, improves posture, and enhances body awareness. Some evidence suggests benefits for pelvic floor health.
- Tai chi. Improves balance, reduces fall risk, and has been shown to benefit bone density in some studies. The meditative component may also support stress management.
Pelvic floor health
Declining oestrogen affects the tissues of the pelvic floor, which can lead to urinary incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, and sexual dysfunction. Pelvic floor exercises (Kegels) are important but often done incorrectly.
If you are experiencing pelvic floor symptoms, consider seeing a pelvic floor physiotherapist. Your GP can refer you through the NHS. They can assess your pelvic floor function and provide a targeted exercise programme. This is a specialised area where generic advice is less effective than individualised guidance.
Track your progress
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Start My Free Check →Building a weekly routine
A balanced weekly exercise plan for menopause might look like this:
- 2-3 days of strength training (30-45 minutes each, focusing on major muscle groups)
- 3-5 days of moderate cardiovascular exercise (30 minutes of brisk walking, cycling, or swimming)
- 2-3 days of flexibility/mobility work (yoga, stretching, or tai chi, 15-30 minutes)
- Daily: general movement (taking stairs, walking during breaks, gardening)
- At least 1-2 rest or active recovery days per week
This might seem like a lot, but many of these overlap. A yoga session counts as both flexibility and balance work. A brisk walk counts as both cardio and weight-bearing exercise. The total time commitment can be as little as 30-45 minutes per day, which is a reasonable and sustainable goal.
Overcoming barriers
Knowing what to do is one thing. Actually doing it is another. Common barriers and how to address them:
- Fatigue. It seems counterintuitive, but exercise generally improves energy levels over time. Start with low-intensity movement and gradually build. Most women find that once they start, they feel better, not worse.
- Joint pain. Modify exercises to reduce impact. Swimming, cycling, and strength training with proper form are all joint-friendly options. Strengthening muscles around painful joints often reduces pain over time.
- Hot flushes during exercise. Exercise in cooler environments, wear moisture-wicking clothing, stay hydrated, and consider exercising in the morning when body temperature is lower.
- Time constraints. Shorter, more frequent sessions are just as effective as longer ones. Even 10-minute blocks of activity add up.
- Intimidation. You do not need to join a gym or attend a class. Home-based exercise with minimal equipment (a set of dumbbells and a mat) is effective. Online resources offer guided workouts for all levels.
The bottom line
Exercise during menopause is not optional for optimal health. It is arguably the most powerful tool you have for managing symptoms, protecting your bones and heart, maintaining your mental health, and preserving your physical function for the decades ahead.
The most important shift for many women is moving strength training from the periphery to the centre of their exercise routine. Combined with regular cardiovascular exercise, flexibility work, and adequate rest, this approach addresses the specific challenges of the menopausal transition more effectively than any single intervention.
Start where you are. Do what you can. And remember: consistency over intensity, every time.