What your irregular period is telling you — reading the signal

The menstrual cycle is regulated by the HPO axis — the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian cascade that produces the hormonal signals driving ovulation and the cycle. This axis is extraordinarily sensitive to environmental input. Chronic stress, inadequate energy availability, nutritional deficiencies, significant weight changes and thyroid dysfunction all disrupt the HPO axis in measurable ways — and the menstrual cycle is the visible output of that disruption.

This makes irregular periods one of the most reliable early warning systems the female body has. A cycle that changes without a clear lifestyle explanation is the hormonal system reporting that something in its environment has changed. The diagnostic question is not "why is my period irregular" — it is "what has changed in my hormonal environment in the last three to six months."

What causes irregular periods?
The most common hormonal causes: chronic stress suppressing the HPO axis, overtraining and energy deficit reducing GnRH production, significant weight changes affecting estrogen, thyroid dysfunction disrupting the hormonal cascade, PCOS affecting ovulation, nutritional deficiencies, and early perimenopause causing increasing hormonal variability. Each cause produces a specific pattern of irregularity — identifying the cause is the first step to addressing it.

The five most common causes — and how to identify yours

Chronic stress. Cortisol suppresses GnRH through multiple mechanisms — including direct inhibition of the hypothalamus and kisspeptin suppression. Stress-related cycle disruption typically presents as cycles becoming longer and more variable, with a shortened luteal phase initially. The timing correlates with periods of elevated life stress. Managing cortisol — through sleep, cycle-aware training and stress reduction — typically restores cycle regularity within two to three months. Read more about how cortisol disrupts the hormonal cycle.

Overtraining and energy deficit. The combination of high training volume and inadequate caloric intake is one of the most reliable cycle disruptors in active women. The pattern: cycles become irregular, the luteal phase shortens, periods become lighter, and eventually may stop. Increasing caloric intake — particularly carbohydrates, which directly support GnRH production — and reducing training volume typically restores cycle function within one to four months. Read more about how overtraining affects hormones.

Thyroid dysfunction. The thyroid directly regulates the production and clearance of sex hormones. Both hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) and hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) disrupt the menstrual cycle — producing irregularity, cycle changes and in severe cases absent periods. Request a full thyroid panel including TSH, fT3, fT4 and thyroid antibodies. Subclinical hypothyroidism — where TSH is elevated but T3 and T4 appear normal — can produce significant cycle disruption without appearing on basic panels.

Significant weight change. Adipose tissue converts androgens to estrogen via aromatase. Significant fat loss reduces estrogen production. Significant fat gain increases estrogen through excess aromatase activity — disrupting the estrogen-progesterone ratio. Both directions of significant weight change can disrupt cycle regularity.

Approaching perimenopause. If you are in your late 30s or 40s and your previously regular cycle is becoming irregular without a lifestyle explanation — early perimenopause is worth considering. Read more about perimenopause symptoms in your 30s.

Can stress cause irregular periods?
Yes — directly through cortisol suppression of the HPO axis. The hypothalamus reads chronic stress as conditions incompatible with reproduction and reduces GnRH accordingly, disrupting ovulation and cycle timing. Stress-related irregularity typically begins with a longer or more variable cycle, then shortened luteal phase, then anovulatory cycles. Managing cortisol through sleep, cycle-aware training and stress reduction typically restores regularity within two to three months.
Can over-exercising cause irregular periods?
Yes. Overtraining combined with energy deficit is one of the most reliable ways to disrupt the menstrual cycle in active women. The hypothalamus reads chronic energy deficit and high training cortisol as incompatible with reproduction and reduces GnRH accordingly. Increasing caloric intake and reducing training volume typically restores cycle function within one to four months.

What to do — tracking, testing and addressing the cause

Start tracking your cycle today — cycle length, flow intensity, premenstrual symptoms, energy patterns, sleep quality. Three to six months of consistent tracking gives you the data that makes a GP appointment productive. Most GPs have limited time — arriving with three to six months of cycle data and a clear description of what has changed significantly improves the likelihood of appropriate investigation.

Request specific blood tests: full thyroid panel (TSH, fT3, fT4, antibodies), ferritin (separate from haemoglobin), FSH and oestradiol on days 2 to 5, progesterone on day 21, testosterone and SHBG, vitamin D. These seven tests cover the most common hormonal causes of irregular periods and give you actionable information rather than a normal result that tells you nothing.

For the complete framework of cycle tracking, phase-specific nutrition and lifestyle interventions that support hormonal regularity — The Women's Hormone Blueprint maps the science and the practical response to every hormonal pattern. Combined with the daily tracking in The Aligned Woman Journal, this gives you the structure to understand your cycle in the detail that makes irregularity readable rather than alarming.

What does a normal period cycle look like?
24 to 35 days cycle length. Flow lasting 3 to 7 days. Up to 7 to 9 days variation between cycles is normal. Consistently shorter than 24 or longer than 35 days, significant variation, complete absence of periods, or significant change in flow intensity or pain warrants investigation.
When should you see a doctor for irregular periods?
If your cycle has become irregular after previously being regular without a clear cause, if you have missed three or more periods and are not pregnant, if cycles are consistently outside the 24 to 35 day range, if periods have become significantly heavier or more painful, or if you have other symptoms suggesting thyroid dysfunction or PCOS.