There’s no single best contraceptive — the right method depends on your health, your priorities, and how it interacts with your cycle and symptoms. Here’s how the main options compare.
The main methods
- Combined pill, patch, ring: hormonal, regulate cycles, user-dependent
- Progestogen-only pill (mini pill): hormonal, suitable when oestrogen isn’t
- IUD/IUS: long-acting, very effective; hormonal (IUS) or copper (non-hormonal)
- Implant and injection: long-acting hormonal options
- Barrier methods (condoms): non-hormonal, also protect against STIs
- Fertility awareness methods: hormone-free, require careful tracking
Side effects and your cycle
Hormonal methods can change or stop your bleeding, and may affect mood, skin, and libido — sometimes for better (hormonal acne often improves) and sometimes for worse. Coming off hormonal birth control can take a few months for natural cycles to settle; see coming off birth control.
Choosing what’s right for you
If avoiding hormones matters to you, fertility awareness or copper IUD/barrier methods are options. If you want help with hormonal acne or heavy periods, certain hormonal methods may help. Discuss your history with a clinician to weigh effectiveness against side effects.
For readers in Canada
In Canada, care is delivered through provincial health systems and private providers, and PIPEDA governs how organisations handle your personal data.
