At a glance
- It's not in your head: during menopause, the body stores and burns differently.
- Fat migrates to the belly (visceral fat) due to declining estrogen levels.
- Muscle is your #1 ally: we lose it with age, and it supports metabolism.
- Very restrictive diets are counterproductive: they cause muscle loss and promote the rebound effect.
- Sleep and stress are as important as diet: they control appetite and fat storage.
1. Why do we gain weight during menopause?
Let's start by lifting the guilt: if you're gaining weight even though your habits haven't changed, it's not a lack of discipline. Several mechanisms converge during menopause.
First, the drop in estrogen alters how the body distributes fat and manages insulin sensitivity. Second, from the age of forty, we naturally lose muscle mass (a phenomenon called sarcopenia) — and muscle is the tissue that consumes the most energy at rest. Less muscle means a lower basal metabolic rate: your body expends less, even without changing anything. Finally, fragmented sleep and stress during this period raise cortisol levels, which promotes abdominal fat storage and cravings.
According to major health tracking studies on women during menopause (such as the SWAN cohort), this transition is frequently accompanied by moderate weight gain and, more importantly, a redistribution of fat. In other words: the problem isn't just the number on the scale, but where the fat goes. To pinpoint your stage in this transition, our comparison of perimenopause vs. menopause will shed light.

2. The changing belly: abdominal fat explained
Many women describe it this way: "I always gained weight on my hips, and now it's my stomach." This isn't just an impression. Before menopause, estrogen directs fat storage to the hips and thighs (so-called subcutaneous fat). When estrogen levels drop, storage shifts to the abdomen, in the form of visceral fat — the fat that surrounds organs.
Waist circumference is therefore a better indicator than the scale alone. If your weight changes little but your waistband is tighter, this redistribution is at play — and it's precisely something we can act on.
3. Diet: what really works (without restrictive dieting)
First habit to abandon: drastic low-calorie diets. They cause water and muscle loss, further slow down metabolism, and lead to a rebound effect. During menopause, you don't eat less, you eat better and more nutrient-dense.
More protein
With every meal (eggs, fish, legumes, tofu, yogurt). They preserve muscle, satisfy hunger, and limit snacking. This is the number one lever.
Plenty of fiber
Vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains: satiety, more stable blood sugar, and better digestion.
Less refined sugars
Blood sugar spikes promote abdominal fat storage and cravings. Reduce added sugar, not pleasure.
Good fats
Olive oil, nuts, oily fish: satiety and hormonal support, without excess empty calories.
To learn more about the method, without deprivation, our natural weight loss guide details how to start without a rebound effect, and our article on the 5 fatal weight loss mistakes lists pitfalls to avoid.

4. Muscle & movement: the most underestimated lever
If you only remember one thing: protect and rebuild your muscle. It maintains your metabolism, strength, posture, and bone density. During menopause, relying solely on cardio is a common mistake.
per week minimum of strength training (bodyweight, resistance bands, or dumbbells) to preserve lean mass.
of moderate activity per week (brisk walking, cycling, swimming) recommended for health and weight.
the energy expenditure of small daily movements (walking, climbing stairs): underestimated, but crucial.
Strength training doesn't require a gym or high performance: 20 to 30 minutes, twice a week, is enough to reverse the trend. To understand why muscle declines and how to rebuild it intelligently, read our article dedicated to muscle loss during menopause.
5. Sleep, stress, and hormones: the neglected trio
You can do everything "right" with diet and exercise, and still plateau due to sleep and stress. This is the blind spot of menopausal weight gain.
Lack of sleep disrupts appetite hormones (more hunger, less satiety) and increases sugar cravings. Night sweats, common during this period, fragment sleep. Chronic stress, in turn, elevates cortisol, which promotes abdominal fat storage. Addressing these two levers — sleep hygiene, breathing, calming activities — can unlock a seemingly stuck situation.
| Lever | Concrete action |
|---|---|
| Proteins | A source with each meal, ~20-30g, to protect muscle. |
| Strength | Strength training 2× / week, progressive. |
| Sleep | Regular hours, cool room, screens off in the evening. |
| Stress | Breathing, walking, enjoyable activities — lower cortisol. |
| Blood Sugar | Less refined sugars, more fiber and protein. |
6. Supplements: what can help (and what doesn't work miracles)
Let's be clear: no supplement "melts away" fat, and beware of those that promise it. However, certain nutrients support the levers described above, with benefits recognized by the EFSA.
Signs that targeted support can help you
- Fatigue that saps your motivation to move.
- Sugar cravings, especially in the late afternoon.
- Fragmented sleep due to hot flashes.
- A diet making it difficult to get enough protein, B6, or magnesium.
If these points resonate with you, an adapted nutritional foundation — in addition to diet and exercise — can make a difference. For an overview, also see our guide to essential supplements after 50.
A nutritional foundation for this new stage
30 active ingredients in one daily dose — B6, magnesium, B complex, marine collagen — to support energy, muscle, and balance, without synthetic hormones.
Discover Menopause Vitality ComplexFrequently Asked Questions
How to lose weight during menopause?
By combining four levers rather than a restrictive diet: increasing protein at each meal to preserve muscle, adding strength training twice a week, improving sleep and reducing stress (which control appetite), and limiting refined sugars. It's the combination that works, not deprivation.
How to lose belly fat during menopause?
Abdominal (visceral) fat responds well to regular physical activity, strength training, and a diet rich in protein and fiber, low in refined sugars. Waist circumference is a better indicator than the scale. No method targets only one area: overall improvement reduces belly fat.
Is weight gain during menopause inevitable?
No. Moderate weight gain and redistribution to the belly are common, but they are not inevitable. By acting early on muscle, diet, and sleep, you can largely limit or even reverse the trend.
How long does it take to see results?
The first changes (energy, satiety, waist circumference) often appear in 4 to 8 weeks with consistent habits. Consistency matters more than intensity: sustainable long-term changes are better than extreme, short-lived efforts.
What supplement for menopausal weight gain?
No single supplement causes weight loss on its own. However, vitamin B6, magnesium, the B complex, and sufficient protein intake support metabolism, energy, and muscle — the real levers. Prioritize a holistic approach rather than "fat burners" with excessive promises.
Scientific Sources
- Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) — changes in weight and body composition during menopause.
- European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) — authorized health claims (vitamin B6, magnesium, proteins): efsa.europa.eu
- ANSES — Physical activity, nutrition and food supplements: anses.fr
- Literature on sarcopenia and the role of strength training after 45.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not replace medical advice. In case of rapid and unexplained weight gain, or ongoing treatment, consult your doctor.
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The information shared on this blog is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not replace medical consultation, diagnosis or treatment prescribed by a healthcare professional. If you have symptoms, are undergoing treatment or are pregnant, consult your doctor before modifying your diet or starting supplementation. Nutremys LAB food supplements should not replace a varied, balanced diet or a healthy lifestyle.







