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Nutrition for your hormones

How to eat for steadier cycles, energy, and hormonal health.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Amara Vance, MD · 2 min read

Food is one of the most powerful, sustainable levers for hormonal health. You don’t need a restrictive diet — a few consistent habits support steadier blood sugar, better energy, and easier cycles.

The foundations

  • Protein at each meal to steady blood sugar and support satiety
  • Plenty of fibre from vegetables, legumes, and whole grains
  • Iron-rich foods around your period to replace losses
  • Healthy fats (omega-3s) for hormone production and mood
  • Limiting ultra-processed foods and excess alcohol

Eating for your cycle and conditions

For PCOS, lower-glycaemic eating helps the common insulin resistance. For periods, magnesium and iron support cramps and energy. For fertility, a folate-rich diet with a prenatal vitamin matters. In menopause, protein and calcium support muscle and bone.

A note on supplements

Supplements can help fill genuine gaps (like vitamin D or, in pregnancy, folate), but they’re not a substitute for food and aren’t tightly regulated. Get personalised advice from a clinician or registered dietitian rather than relying on social-media claims.

For readers in Europe

Across the EU, GDPR gives you strong rights over your health data, including the right to access and erase it. Availability of services and medicines varies by country.

Frequently asked questions

What foods help balance hormones?

There’s no magic food, but adequate protein, fibre, healthy fats, and stable blood sugar support hormonal health.

What should I eat on my period?

Iron-rich foods (to replace losses), magnesium-containing foods (for cramps), and enough protein and fluids for energy.

Is there a best diet for PCOS?

Lower-glycaemic eating with protein and fibre helps many people with the insulin resistance common in PCOS.

Do I need supplements?

Some are useful for genuine gaps (e.g. vitamin D, prenatal folate), but food comes first. Ask a clinician before starting supplements.

References

  1. Eat well NHS
  2. Healthy eating Office on Women’s Health
  3. Nutrition during pregnancy ACOG

Keep exploring

Hormonal healthPCOSCycle syncing

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