If you’ve noticed that your usual PMS symptoms seem different lately, you may have found yourself wondering whether something else is going on.
The challenge is that early perimenopause and PMS can look remarkably similar. Both can affect your mood, sleep, energy levels, concentration and menstrual cycle, making it difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins.
Whilst there is a lot of overlap, there are also some important differences. Understanding the pattern behind your symptoms can provide valuable clues about whether you’re dealing with PMS, perimenopause or a combination of both.
The symptoms of late-stage PMS and perimenopause are incredibly similar, making it really difficult to know what’s going on. Symptoms like mood swings, bloating, sleep disruptions, brain fog, breast tenderness, anxiety or irregular periods can all occur in both.
Because the symptoms overlap so closely, it can be difficult to know whether you’re experiencing PMS, perimenopause, or a combination of both.
PMS and perimenopause both involve fluctuations in oestrogen and progesterone, which is why the symptoms can feel almost identical.
The key difference is timing. PMS happens as part of a normal menstrual cycle, with symptoms appearing in the lead up to your period, whereas perimenopause happens as ovarian function gradually changes, meaning symptoms can occur at any point in the cycle. Your brain and body respond to the hormonal fluctuations themselves, regardless of why they’re happening, which is why the symptoms can be so similar.
What makes it even more confusing is that it is possible to experience both at the same time. Many women enter perimenopause while still having regular periods and ongoing PMS symptoms, making it difficult to separate one from another.
PMS typically occurs during the luteal phase, which is the second half of the menstrual cycle after ovulation. During this time, progesterone rises and then sharply drops off if a pregnancy has not occurred. Oestrogen also drops before menstruation begins and these hormonal changes are what contribute to common PMS symptoms. Continue learning about the luteal phase.
The hallmark of PMS is predictability, with symptoms often improving within a day or two of menstruation starting. Symptoms usually appear at roughly the same time in your cycle, making it slightly easier to predict, and it is one of the biggest clues that PMS is driving your symptoms. You may be interested in learning 'What your period can say about your health.'
During your 20s and early 30s, ovarian function is typically quite consistent. While factors such as stress, poor sleep or dietary changes can influence symptoms' severity, the overall pattern tends to remain relatively stable.
Symptoms usually appear at a similar point in the cycle and resolve at a similar time each month.
Perimenopause is a transitional phase that occurs before menopause, when hormones begin to naturally shift.
Typically, it can occur between the ages of 35-45, when progesterone levels start to decline, but some women start to notice the changes earlier. It can last anywhere from 4-10 years and the transition is usually gradual, rather than a sudden event.
One of the earliest hormonal changes in perimenopause is that ovulation becomes less consistent.
Because progesterone production is stimulated by ovulation, when it becomes less frequent, it can lead to lower progesterone levels. This often happens long before periods become noticeably irregular.
Without enough calming progesterone to balance things out, you can experience relative 'oestrogen dominance', which often feels like worsening PMS before any cycle changes occur. For some women, worsening PMS is one of the earliest clues that perimenopause has begun.
Many women imagine perimenopause as a steady decline in oestrogen; however, early perimenopause is usually much more sporadic than that.
Oestrogen levels can swing from one cycle to the next and sometimes even within the same cycle. These fluctuations can affect mood, sleep, temperature regulation and menstrual bleeding.
This unpredictability is what drives many early symptoms. Early perimenopause is often less about having low oestrogen and more about the unpredictability, which mimics and amplifies PMS.
Both PMS and perimenopause involve fluctuations in oestrogen and progesterone, which influence neurotransmitters involved in mood regulation. When these hormones shift, many women notice increased anxiety, irritability, emotional sensitivity or low mood.
Progesterone has a calming effect that promotes deep, restorative sleep, while oestrogen also plays a role in sleep quality and temperature regulation. Fluctuations in either hormone can disrupt sleep, which can worsen fatigue, mood and concentration, creating a continual cycle that is difficult to break.
Oestrogen naturally promotes fluid retention and stimulates breast tissue. When you don’t have enough progesterone to counterbalance it, oestrogens' fluid-retaining effects are amplified, leading to tender breasts and physical puffiness.
Oestrogen plays an important role in memory, concentration and mental clarity. Your brain is packed with oestrogen receptors that rely on steady hormone levels for sharp cognitive function.
When levels fluctuate, many women notice that they feel less focused, more forgetful or find it harder to concentrate.
Occasional cycles where you don’t release an egg (anovulatory cycles) can happen in both states, which can affect cycle length, flow and timing. PMS can involve subtle changes from cycle to cycle; however, major cycle changes are more suggestive of perimenopause.
If your cycle is becoming noticeably shorter, longer, heavier, lighter or more unpredictable than it used to be, that points more towards perimenopause.
For example, if your period has always arrived every 28 days, but now it is arriving after 23 days one month and 35 days the next, perimenopause is a more likely explanation than PMS alone. Continue learning about perimenopause periods.
PMS usually follows a predictable pattern. If your mood swings, anxiety, brain fog or sleep disruptions are no longer confined to the week before your period and are instead carrying on for the rest of the month, that is more likely to be perimenopause. You may notice that you feel 'off' even during parts of the cycle that used to feel fine.
If you’ve started experiencing symptoms such as night sweats, hot flushes, vaginal dryness, or new joint aches, these symptoms are more closely linked with perimenopause. Even relatively mild symptoms can provide useful clues that hormonal changes are extending beyond the normal menstrual cycle.
If you are in this age bracket and your historical symptom pattern has shifted noticeably over the last 1-2 years, it is likely that you are seeing the early stages of perimenopause. You may notice new symptoms that you’ve never experienced before and what matters most is a clear shift from what has previously been normal for you.
In PMS, symptoms usually resolve when your period begins.
If your period arrives but your brain fog, fatigue, anxiety or disrupted sleep continue for days afterwards, that is more likely to be perimenopause.
Continue reading about the common signs of perimenopause.
If your cycle follows predictable timing occurring at roughly the same time each month and your symptoms track that timeline, it points more towards PMS.
The stronger the connection between symptoms and cycle timing, the more likely hormonal changes within a normal menstrual cycle are driving them.
PMS tends to follow a predictable schedule. Symptoms usually appear during the luteal phase and remain present until menstruation and then improve within 1-2 days of your period starting.
If that pattern has remained unchanged for years, PMS is likely the explanation.
While perimenopause can begin earlier for some women, PMS is generally more likely if you’re under 35 and your cycle length, flow and symptom timing have remained steady. You may be interested in reading 'Why is my period getting worse in my 30s?'
If your premenstrual symptoms have all remained relatively consistent, feeling the same as they did five years ago, rather than recently escalating or changing character, that points towards PMS.
Sometimes it isn’t an either/or situation; you can experience both at the same time.
Because progesterone drops first during early perimenopause, many women become more sensitive to the hormonal shifts that occur before a period. Existing PMS symptoms can become more intense and more disruptive.
Many women describe feeling as though their PMS symptoms have suddenly become much worse. The cycle may still be regular, with the same symptoms still arriving before your period, but the difference is that they’re suddenly much stronger than they used to be. In this way, early perimenopause can act like a PMS amplifier.
Many women miss this phase because they assume perimenopause begins with missed periods and obvious hot flushes. In reality, the transition often starts much earlier and much more subtly.
Because they still have a regular bleed, it’s easy to assume it’s simply worsening PMS, rather than recognising that perimenopause may already be underway.
If you’re unsure what’s driving your symptoms, spend 2-3 months tracking your cycle. Alongside recording your period dates, your mood, energy levels, sleep quality, breast tenderness and any other symptoms you experience. Doing this daily can help to reveal whether symptoms are following a predictable pattern or becoming more unpredictable.
If your symptoms are affecting your quality of life, it’s worth speaking to your GP. This includes significant cycle changes, heavy bleeding, or symptoms that are becoming difficult to manage.
You can ask about hormone testing, including FSH (follicle stimulating hormone), but it’s important to remember that hormone levels can fluctuate from day to day during perimenopause. A single test result may not always provide a clear answer.
Learn how to talk to your doctor about menopause.
The foundations of nutritional support are surprisingly similar in both PMS and perimenopause. Supporting stable blood sugar levels, eating enough protein and fibre, prioritising sleep and ensuring adequate intake of key nutrients can help support hormonal health at both stages.
For PMS, the focus is often on supporting the menstrual cycle and reducing the impact of cyclical hormone changes. Nutrients such as magnesium and vitamin B6 have been studied for their role in supporting premenstrual symptoms.
During perimenopause, support often broadens beyond symptom management alone. Alongside supporting mood, energy and sleep, maintaining adequate protein intake becomes increasingly important for muscle mass, while calcium and vitamin D become more important for long-term bone health. A fibre-rich diet may also help support healthy hormone metabolism during this transition.
The most important step, whichever stage you're in, is understanding your own pattern. Once you can see how your symptoms relate to your cycle, it becomes much easier to identify the support that's most.
You may be interested in how to get menopause ready in your 30s.
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Discover our Menopause Hub, it includes resources to help support women through all stages of the menopause.
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