Reduced Libido in Perimenopause and Menopause: Causes, Relief, and When to See a Doctor
Experiencing reduced libido during the menopause transition? Understand how hormones may contribute, evidence-based self-care, red flags, and how to prepare for a clinician visit.
Verified against Clinical Guidelines
This article was developed and verified against current clinical standards from NAMS, BMS, and the STRAW+10 staging framework.

Reduced Libido can show up or worsen during perimenopause and menopause. That does not mean hormones explain everything — but it does mean your story deserves context, pattern tracking, and a plan that fits your priorities.
How hormones and midlife context may connect
The menopause transition involves fluctuating oestrogen and changing progesterone exposure, which can affect sleep, mood, pain perception, thermoregulation, and more. Genitourinary symptoms often overlap with other common midlife conditions, so timing and pattern matter as much as the symptom label.
Other causes your clinician may consider
Keep an open mind: medications, thyroid disease, iron deficiency, sleep disorders, mental health conditions, and other medical issues can mimic or amplify reduced libido. Your clinician can help narrow the list based on your history and exam.
Evidence-based relief strategies
These strategies are educational reference points — not personal medical advice. Always discuss treatment options with a qualified healthcare provider.
- Open conversation with your partner about desires and expectations.
- Address contributing factors: fatigue, stress, body-image changes.
- Topical oestrogen if vaginal dryness is a barrier.
- Regular exercise boosts energy and body confidence for many.
- Discuss testosterone therapy (off-label in some regions) with your provider.
What to bring to your appointment
- Two to four weeks of dated entries: severity, sleep, triggers, cycle notes if applicable.
- A short list of medications and supplements (including doses).
- What you have already tried and whether it helped.
- Your top priority outcome (for example sleep, work function, pain, or mood).
How tracking helps
Pattern data turns a vague complaint into a timeline your clinician can interpret quickly — especially when hormones fluctuate and labs are non-diagnostic.
Related on Periwell
Next step
Track patterns before your visit
Log Reduced Libido alongside sleep, cycle, and triggers in Periwell — then use your export to guide the conversation.
Open Assessment →Common questions
- Can perimenopause or menopause cause reduced libido?
- It can contribute for some people, especially alongside sleep loss, stress, or other midlife changes — but it is not the only explanation. A clinician can help sort causes and treatments.
- When should I seek urgent care for reduced libido?
- Seek urgent evaluation for severe sudden symptoms, neurological deficits, chest pain, fainting, heavy bleeding with dizziness, or any symptom that feels dramatically different from your baseline. This article cannot replace triage.
- Will hormone therapy help?
- It depends on your history, symptoms, and risks. For some people, menopausal hormone therapy is highly effective; for others it is not appropriate. That decision belongs to you and a qualified prescriber.
- What is the fastest way to prepare for a visit?
- Track frequency, severity, triggers, and sleep for a few weeks, then summarise on one page. Periwell can help you export a clinician-ready snapshot.
Keep reading
- Hot Flashes in Perimenopause and Menopause: Causes, Relief, and When to See a Doctor
Experiencing hot flashes during the menopause transition? Understand how hormones may contribute, evidence-based self-care, red flags, and how to prepare for a clinician visit.
- Night Sweats in Perimenopause and Menopause: Causes, Relief, and When to See a Doctor
Experiencing night sweats during the menopause transition? Understand how hormones may contribute, evidence-based self-care, red flags, and how to prepare for a clinician visit.
- Heart Palpitations in Perimenopause and Menopause: Causes, Relief, and When to See a Doctor
Experiencing heart palpitations during the menopause transition? Understand how hormones may contribute, evidence-based self-care, red flags, and how to prepare for a clinician visit.