Why is my period getting worse in my 30s? – DR.VEGAN

Why is my period getting worse in my 30s?

Why is my period getting worse in my 30s?

You may have been managing your PMS for years. You know the signs – a few rough days before your period, maybe some bloating and low mood, then it passes.

But somewhere in your mid-to-late 30s, something shifts. The symptoms that were manageable start feeling unmanageable. The anxiety is sharper. The fatigue hits harder. The week before your period, which used to be an inconvenience, has started derailing you. And you can’t point to any obvious reason why.

You’re not imagining it and  it’s not ‘just stress.’ Something is actually changing and it starts with your hormones.

What actually changes hormonally in your 30s

Progesterone starts declining before oestrogen does

Here’s what most people  (and many GPs) don’t know – the hormonal shift that changes PMS in the mid-to-late 30s begins with progesterone. Progesterone is the hormone produced after ovulation and it’s the one responsible for keeping the second half of your cycle feeling stable. It supports sleep, regulates mood and acts as a natural balance to oestrogen.

From around your mid-30s, progesterone levels begin to decline. Oestrogen, meanwhile, tends to stay relatively robust for longer. The result is a shift in the ratio between the two.  You have less progesterone relative to oestrogen and this changes how the premenstrual phase feels.

What relative oestrogen dominance means in the luteal phase

When progesterone is lower relative to oestrogen, your luteal phase becomes hormonally less stable. Oestrogen’s effects, including fluid retention, breast tenderness and histamine release, are less counterbalanced. The regulatory effect that progesterone has on mood, sleep and the nervous system is weakened. Everything that was already present in your PMS unfortunately gets amplified.

Why this makes the hormonal ‘drop’ at the end of your cycle feel steeper

In your 20s, your hormones drop at the end of the luteal phase from a relatively stable, balanced starting point. In your mid-to-late 30s, they’re dropping from a position of already lower progesterone. So even though the absolute drop might not be larger, the body’s experience of it (particularly the nervous system’s response) can be dramatically more intense.

How this amplifies existing PMS symptoms - and creates new ones

Mood and anxiety: why the serotonin dip hits harder

Oestrogen supports serotonin production. As oestrogen drops in the late luteal phase, serotonin can fall too - which is part of why low mood, irritability and anxiety appear before your period. In your 30s, when progesterone is also lower and providing less of its natural calming effect on the nervous system, this serotonin dip tends to land harder. Women who previously noticed mild premenstrual irritability sometimes find themselves experiencing significant anxiety or emotional dysregulation in this phase. Continue learning about PMS anxiety.

Sleep: why the luteal phase insomnia gets worse with age

Progesterone has a natural sedative quality - it promotes calm and supports sleep. As it declines with age, the sleep disruption that some women experience in the late luteal phase becomes more pronounced. Waking between 3 and 5am, finding it hard to switch off, or feeling exhausted but unable to sleep are all common premenstrual sleep complaints that tend to worsen in the late 30s. Continue reading about PMS sleep.

Bloating and water retention: oestrogen’s role

Oestrogen promotes fluid retention. When progesterone is lower and providing less of a counterbalancing effect, women in their 30s can notice more significant bloating, puffiness and discomfort in the premenstrual phase than they did a decade earlier. You may be interested in reading about period poo.

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New symptoms appearing that weren’t there in your 20s

Headaches or migraines before the period, joint aches, heart palpitations and increased sensitivity to pain are all symptoms that can emerge or worsen in the late 30s as the hormonal environment shifts. If you’re experiencing symptoms you’ve never had before alongside your PMS, this is the likely context - even if a GP has told you your bloods are normal.

PMS in your 30s vs your 20s: what’s actually different

Shorter windows of feeling well between cycles

In your 20s, the window between your period ending and PMS beginning might have felt reasonably long. In your 30s, some women find that the ‘good’ part of the cycle shrinks - PMS starts earlier in the luteal phase and the post-period recovery takes longer. The month starts to feel like it’s mostly PMS, with a small gap in the middle.

Symptoms starting earlier in the luteal phase

If PMS used to arrive reliably on day 24 or 25, you might find it creeping back to day 19 or 20. This is a sign of the luteal phase becoming hormonally less stable - the hormonal drop is beginning earlier and the body is responding accordingly.

Recovery taking longer after your period arrives

For some women in their 30s, the relief of the period arriving isn’t as immediate or complete as it used to be. It might take a couple of days into the period before the anxiety lifts and the energy returns. This is part of the same picture - a hormonal system that’s less resilient than it was.

Discover our PMS Hub, it includes resources to help support women through their cycle.

Could this be early perimenopause? What to know - without panicking

The honest answer is that it might be the beginning of a perimenopause transition and it’s worth understanding what that means.

Perimenopause is the years of hormonal transition leading up to menopause.  It can begin in the mid-30s, though it’s more commonly in the early-to-mid 40s. It doesn’t mean your periods are ending soon. It means the hormonal fluctuations are becoming more pronounced and the symptoms you’re experiencing may be part of that early transition.

Signs that worsening PMS might be moving into early perimenopause territory include cycles becoming shorter or more irregular, heavier or lighter periods than before, hot flushes or night sweats starting to appear, and significant worsening of premenstrual mood symptoms. These changes can happen gradually over years.

GPs often miss early perimenopause because standard blood tests (FSH, LH) are unreliable in the perimenopause - hormones fluctuate significantly and a single test rarely captures the full picture. If you’re in your late 30s or 40s and your symptoms are escalating, it’s worth specifically raising perimenopause with your GP and asking for a clinical assessment based on your symptom history, not just bloods.

Tired of confusing health advice? Let our Virtual Nutritionist simplify it.

What can help: nutritional and lifestyle support for this life stage

Targeted nutritional support in the luteal phase

Magnesium is probably the most evidence-supported nutrient for PMS. It supports the nervous system, helps regulate cortisol, and plays a role in serotonin synthesis. Many women find their symptoms respond significantly to good-quality magnesium supplementation, particularly in the luteal phase. Magnesium glycinate is well absorbed and gentle on the gut.

Vitamin B6 supports both serotonin and progesterone metabolism, and there’s a reasonable body of evidence for its role in reducing PMS mood symptoms. 

Learn more about nutrition for PMS and how diet affects your hormones during your period.

Consider targeted supplements

DR.VEGAN® PMS Hero® contains Magnesium, Vitamin B6, Agnus Castus, and Shatavari, alongside ingredients including Ashwagandha KSM-66®, Dong Quai, Dandelion Root, and Bromelain. Together, these vitamins, minerals and botanicals provide comprehensive support throughout your monthly cycle, helping to support hormonal balance, mood, energy, immunity, and reduce tiredness, fatigue and bloating.

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Cycle tracking: why knowing your pattern changes everything

If you’re not already tracking your cycle, it’s a good idea to start now. Knowing exactly when your luteal phase begins - and therefore when symptoms are likely to arrive - changes the experience from something that surprises you to something you can prepare for. Several apps make this straightforward: Natural Cycles, Clue and Flo are all widely used. Even a basic notes app works.

Lifestyle: sleep, stress, alcohol and caffeine in the luteal phase

These aren’t optional extras when you’re in your late 30s. Sleep disruption in the luteal phase amplifies everything - anxiety, mood, pain sensitivity, blood sugar instability. Alcohol  worsens premenstrual anxiety and sleep in ways it didn’t in your 20s. Caffeine after midday can be enough to cause debilitating sleep disruption. None of this requires perfection - but being deliberate about these things in the 10 days before your period makes a measurable difference.

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