Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: May 2026
Hormones are the most underappreciated variable in women’s strength training. Most programming advice is written for men — based on male hormonal profiles that remain relatively stable week to week. Women’s hormonal environments fluctuate significantly across the menstrual cycle, affecting strength, recovery, injury risk, and body composition. Understanding this isn’t about training “differently” — it’s about training smarter. This guide covers the science of how hormones affect strength training for women, with UK and British Powerlifting context throughout.
Table of Contents
- The Key Hormones and What They Do
- The Menstrual Cycle and Training Performance
- Training by Phase
- Estrogen and Muscle
- Testosterone in Women
- Cortisol and Recovery
- Hormones and Injury Risk
- Nutrition and Hormonal Support
- Programming Recommendations
- FAQ
🧬 The Key Hormones and What They Do

Key hormones and their effect on training for women — Castiron Lift
| Hormone | Primary role in strength training | When it peaks | Training implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estrogen | Muscle protein synthesis, bone density, collagen production, anti-inflammatory | Late follicular phase (days 10–14) | Peak strength window — ideal for PRs and heavy sessions |
| Progesterone | Promotes fat oxidation, increases body temperature, can increase fatigue | Luteal phase (days 15–28) | Reduce intensity slightly, prioritise recovery |
| Testosterone | Muscle protein synthesis, strength, power output | Mid-cycle (ovulation) | Coincides with peak performance window |
| Cortisol | Stress response, muscle breakdown if chronically elevated | Morning, high-stress periods | Manage training stress, sleep, and nutrition |
| IGF-1 | Growth factor — drives muscle repair and hypertrophy | Post-training, during sleep | Prioritise sleep and post-workout nutrition |
🗓️ The Menstrual Cycle and Training Performance

The female hormonal cycle and optimal training phases — Castiron Lift
The average menstrual cycle is 28 days, divided into four phases. Sung et al. (2014) in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found significant variation in strength performance across the menstrual cycle, with peak performance in the late follicular phase. The NHS provides a comprehensive overview of the menstrual cycle for reference.
| THE MENSTRUAL CYCLE AND TRAINING PERFORMANCE | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase | Days | Hormonal profile | Performance | Training recommendation |
| Menstrual | 1–5 | All hormones low | Variable | Train as normal. Reduce intensity if needed. |
| Follicular | 6–13 | Estrogen rising | Improving | Increase volume and intensity. |
| Ovulation | 14 | Estrogen + testosterone peak | Peak performance | Schedule PRs and max effort sessions. |
| Luteal | 15–28 | Progesterone dominant | Declining | Reduce intensity 10–15%. Prioritise recovery. |
💪 Training by Phase
🔵 Follicular Phase — Build
- Estrogen rising — muscle protein synthesis elevated, recovery faster
- Do: Increase training volume, add sets, push intensity
🟡 Ovulation — Peak
- Estrogen and testosterone both peak simultaneously
- Do: Schedule BP competition attempts, PR attempts, max effort sessions
- Note: ACL injury risk elevated at ovulation — warm up thoroughly
🔴 Luteal Phase — Recover
- Progesterone dominates — body temperature rises, recovery slows
- Do: Reduce intensity 10–15%, prioritise sleep, increase carbohydrate intake slightly
⚪ Menstrual Phase — Maintain
- All hormones at their lowest — but many women perform well
- Do: Train as normal. Reduce intensity only if symptoms are severe.
🦷 Estrogen and Muscle
Enns & Tiidus (2010) in Sports Medicine documented that estrogen promotes muscle protein synthesis, reduces muscle damage from exercise, and accelerates recovery. This is why women often recover faster than men from equivalent training loads. Estrogen also plays a critical role in bone density — the NHS reports that 1 in 2 women over 50 will experience an osteoporosis-related fracture, making strength training one of the most important preventive interventions available.
💪 Testosterone in Women
Handelsman et al. (2018) in the British Journal of Sports Medicine confirmed that testosterone contributes to muscle mass and strength in women, though the effect is smaller than in men. Women produce approximately 5–10% of male testosterone levels. Women should not attempt to artificially elevate testosterone — the risks outweigh the benefits and it violates anti-doping rules in all British Powerlifting and IPF competitions.
💤 Cortisol and Recovery
Chronically elevated cortisol suppresses muscle protein synthesis, impairs recovery, and can disrupt the menstrual cycle. Hackney (2006) in Current Women’s Health Reviews documented that female athletes are more susceptible to exercise-induced cortisol dysregulation than male athletes. Practical implications:
- Don’t train fasted for heavy sessions
- Prioritise 7–9 hours of sleep — NHS sleep guidelines
- Deload every 4–6 weeks — see our Deload Week Guide — UK
⚠️ Hormones and Injury Risk
| Injury risk factor | Hormonal cause | When highest | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACL laxity | Estrogen increases ligament laxity | Ovulation (day 14) | Thorough warm-up |
| Tendon stiffness reduction | Estrogen reduces tendon stiffness | Late follicular phase | Warm up thoroughly before heavy sessions |
| Stress fracture risk | Low estrogen reduces bone density | Amenorrhea / low energy availability | Maintain adequate caloric intake |
Hewett et al. (2006) in the American Journal of Sports Medicine found ACL injury rates in female athletes are 2–8x higher than male athletes, with hormonal factors contributing significantly.
🍽️ Nutrition and Hormonal Support
| Nutritional factor | Hormonal effect | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Caloric intake | Under-eating suppresses estrogen and disrupts the menstrual cycle | Minimum 1.6g protein/kg bodyweight |
| Carbohydrates | Low carb diets can elevate cortisol | Don’t go very low carb during heavy training blocks |
| Iron | Menstruation increases iron loss | Monitor iron levels — NHS iron deficiency guidance |
| Vitamin D | Supports testosterone production and bone density | NHS recommends 10mcg/day for UK adults in autumn/winter |
🗓️ Programming Recommendations
| Cycle phase | Volume | Intensity | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Menstrual (days 1–5) | Moderate | Moderate | Maintain |
| Follicular (days 6–13) | High | High | Build |
| Ovulation (day 14) | Moderate | Maximum | Peak — PR attempts |
| Luteal (days 15–28) | Moderate–low | Moderate | Recover |
FAQ
Should I skip training during my period?
No — unless symptoms are severe. Most women can train normally during menstruation. The NHS notes that exercise can actually help relieve period pain.
Does the pill affect strength training?
Oral contraceptives suppress natural hormonal fluctuations. The effect on strength training is small and inconsistent. Most women on the pill train and compete successfully at all levels.
What if I have irregular cycles?
Irregular cycles in athletes often signal low energy availability. Increase caloric intake and consult your GP or a sports medicine physician.
💪 Ready to train smarter?
Start with the Castiron Lift Beginner Programme — UK — free 8-week powerlifting programme.
Related Articles
- Powerlifting for Women — Beginner’s Guide — UK
- Women’s Strength Standards — UK
- Deload Week Guide — UK
- Castiron Lift Beginner Programme — UK
Written by T-K — Strength Researcher & Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift.