Menopause and sex.
Sex changes during and after menopause. Most of the changes have effective treatments. The main barrier is finding a clinician who treats menopausal care well.
The drop in estrogen during and after menopause changes vaginal tissue, lubrication, and sometimes desire. Most of these changes are treatable.
The cultural picture is bleaker than the medical reality. Many women never get appropriate care because they were not told it exists. The right clinician will discuss specific options that fit your history.
Sources listed at the bottom of this page.
What changes
Lower estrogen leads to several measurable changes: thinner vaginal walls, less natural lubrication, sometimes reduced sensation, and a higher rate of urinary tract infections. Doctors call this the genitourinary syndrome of menopause, or GSM.
Desire can also shift. Patterns are individual.
What menopause commonly does to sex
Not every woman has all of these. Most have some.
Vaginal dryness
Less natural lubrication during arousal. The most common symptom and the easiest to address.
Tissue thinning
Vaginal walls become thinner and more fragile. Penetration may become uncomfortable. Treatable.
Reduced sensation
Some women report dampened response. Often improves with treatment.
Recurring UTIs
More common after menopause. Treatable.
What we know from research
Research on menopausal sexual symptoms is solid. Several treatments produce meaningful improvement in most patients within 8 to 12 weeks of starting care. The right path depends on your medical history. A specialist will help you decide.
What helps
Talk to a Menopause Society-certified clinician before choosing any treatment.
Find a clinician who treats menopause
Many do not. Ask explicitly: how many menopausal patients with sexual symptoms do you treat per year? Menopause Society-certified practitioners are trained for this.
Discuss treatment options
Several effective paths exist. Each has its own profile of pros, cons, and history. Your clinician will help you pick what fits your situation.
Use a vaginal moisturizer plus a lubricant
Moisturizer for regular use and lubricant during sex. Both are over-the-counter, both help, and they stack with any medical care your clinician recommends. The lubricants page covers the basics.
Adjust pacing
Postmenopausal arousal often takes longer. Twenty minutes of foreplay rather than five. The body still responds. It just needs more runway.