Perimenopause — the years before the final menstrual period — can last four to ten years. Hormone levels fluctuate unpredictably during this window. For most women, it begins in the mid-to-late 40s. It’s also the window where starting or strengthening a resistance training habit pays the highest long-term dividend.
What’s Happening During Perimenopause
Estrogen doesn’t decline in a straight line. During perimenopause, it fluctuates — sometimes spiking higher than normal, sometimes dropping sharply. These fluctuations affect mood, sleep, menstrual cycle regularity, and early bone and muscle changes.
The bone and muscle losses that accelerate at menopause begin gradually during perimenopause. Women who enter menopause with higher bone density and more lean mass have a meaningful buffer — the losses that follow start from a stronger position.
The Case for Starting Before Menopause
Building bone density is easier than rebuilding it. Adding lean mass is more efficient when estrogen is present than when it’s not. Women who establish progressive resistance training during perimenopause enter the menopausal transition with better bone density, more muscle, and an established training habit — all of which make the transition easier to manage.
The research supports this. A longitudinal study following women through the menopausal transition found that those who were regularly strength training before menopause lost significantly less bone density in the years following than those who weren’t — even when the post-menopause groups had similar training volumes.
What to Focus On
During perimenopause, the training priorities are the same as post-menopause — just with better biological conditions to work with. Progressively loaded compound movements (squats, deadlifts, presses, rows) build the bone density and lean mass that will matter most after the transition. High-impact loading — jumping, step-ups with load — adds an additional bone stimulus.
Protein intake becomes more important during this window, not less. Muscle protein synthesis is already declining. Adequate protein — at least 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight — supports the training adaptation.
It’s Not Too Late If You Haven’t Started
Everything above applies to starting post-menopause as well. The advantage of perimenopause is that the hormonal environment still amplifies training adaptations. Starting later is harder, not impossible. The best time is before menopause. The second-best time is now.
→ Strength Training Through Menopause: What Works, What Doesn’t, and Why It Matters
→ Estrogen, Bone Density, and Muscle: The Hormonal Connection
– Stephen Holt, CSCS
29 Again Custom Fitness | Timonium, MD
Nerd Note: Perimenopause begins 4–10 years before the final menstrual period and involves erratic estrogen fluctuations rather than linear decline. Bone loss begins modestly in perimenopause and accelerates sharply in the first 2 years post-menopause. Women with higher baseline BMD and lean mass at menopause onset show better long-term outcomes on both measures. Prior JC, Journal of Clinical Investigation (2018); Avis NE et al., NEJM (2015); Greendale GA et al., Journal of Bone and Mineral Research (2012).
