If estrogen is the hormone of the first half of your cycle — building, rising, energising — then progesterone is the hormone of the second half: steadying, calming, preparing. Most people only know it as "the pregnancy hormone," but that's a fraction of the story. Understanding what progesterone actually does explains so much about why you feel the way you do in the back half of your month.

Where progesterone comes from — and when

Progesterone is made mainly by a temporary structure called the corpus luteum, which forms in the ovary right after you ovulate. This is the key timing point that confuses a lot of people: progesterone rises after ovulation, not during it. In the first half of your cycle (the follicular phase), progesterone is low while estrogen leads. After ovulation, the corpus luteum starts producing progesterone, which dominates the luteal phase — the second half. It peaks in the mid-luteal phase, then falls in the days before your period if you're not pregnant, and that fall is what triggers menstruation.

Source: Progesterone: Natural Function, Levels & Side EffectsCleveland Clinic. Progesterone is produced by the corpus luteum after ovulation and dominates the luteal phase.

When is progesterone highest in the cycle?
Progesterone is highest in the luteal phase, the second half of the cycle after ovulation. It is low in the follicular phase (the first half), rises after ovulation once the corpus luteum forms, peaks in the mid-luteal phase, and then falls in the days before your period if no pregnancy occurs. This is why the luteal phase often feels different from the first half of the month.

Its main job — preparing for pregnancy

Progesterone's name is a clue: "pro-gestation." Its central role is to prepare and maintain the lining of your uterus so that, if an egg is fertilised, it has a thick, nourishing place to implant and grow. If pregnancy happens, progesterone helps sustain it in the early weeks. If it doesn't, progesterone drops, the lining sheds, and you get your period. This rise-and-fall is the rhythm behind your whole cycle.

What is the main function of progesterone?
Progesterone's central job is to prepare and maintain the uterine lining for a possible pregnancy. After ovulation, it builds up the lining so a fertilised egg can implant, and if pregnancy occurs it helps sustain it. If there is no pregnancy, progesterone falls and that drop triggers your period. Beyond reproduction, progesterone also has calming effects on the brain, influences sleep and mood, and helps balance the effects of estrogen.

The part most people miss — progesterone and your brain

Here's where it gets interesting. Progesterone doesn't just act on your uterus — it acts on your brain. When it reaches the brain, progesterone is converted into a compound called allopregnanolone, which calms the nervous system by enhancing GABA, your brain's main "quieting" signal. This is why the luteal phase can feel calmer, sleepier, and sometimes foggier, and it's the reason progesterone is so closely tied to sleep and that pre-period drowsiness.

Source: Administration of progesterone produces mild sedative-like effectsPsychoneuroendocrinology. Progesterone's metabolite allopregnanolone produces calming, sedative-like effects via GABA-A receptors.

Progesterone isn't only a reproductive hormone. It's a brain hormone too — which is why it shapes your sleep, your calm, and your mood.
What does progesterone do besides pregnancy?
Beyond preparing for pregnancy, progesterone has several effects. In the brain, it is converted into allopregnanolone, which has calming, sleep-supporting effects. It influences mood and body temperature, balances some of estrogen's actions, and contributes to the physical and emotional shifts many women feel in the luteal phase, such as feeling sleepier, warmer or more sensitive.

Progesterone and estrogen — a partnership of opposites

Progesterone rarely works alone. So much of how you feel comes from the balance between progesterone and estrogen. Broadly, estrogen tends to be stimulating and building, while progesterone tends to be calming and steadying — and they're meant to rise and fall in a coordinated dance across your cycle. When that balance is off (for example, when progesterone is low relative to estrogen), it can show up as heavier periods, worse PMS, or other symptoms. We compare the two in detail in estrogen vs progesterone.

It also raises your body temperature

One more neat function: progesterone raises your basal body temperature slightly after ovulation. That small, sustained temperature rise is actually how many women confirm they've ovulated when tracking their cycle — it's progesterone leaving its signature.

What low progesterone can look like

Because progesterone does so much, low levels can show up in different ways: irregular periods, spotting before your period, short cycles, heavier or more symptomatic periods (when estrogen is relatively dominant), and difficulty maintaining early pregnancy. But here's the important caveat — most of these symptoms have several possible causes, and you can't diagnose low progesterone from symptoms alone. Only a doctor can confirm it, usually with a blood test timed to a specific point in your cycle.

A note on testing and treatment: if you're wondering about your own progesterone levels, HRT, or supplements, those are medical decisions. This article explains how progesterone works; it isn't a guide to diagnosing or treating a hormone problem. A doctor can test your levels properly and advise what, if anything, you need.
What are signs of low progesterone?
Possible signs of low progesterone can include irregular periods, spotting before your period, short cycles, difficulty staying pregnant, and symptoms linked to estrogen being relatively dominant, such as heavier periods or worse PMS. Many of these can have other causes too, so low progesterone can only be confirmed by a doctor, usually with a blood test timed to your cycle.

Why understanding progesterone changes things

Once you know progesterone runs the second half of your cycle — calming your brain, building your uterine lining, raising your temperature, balancing estrogen — the luteal phase stops feeling mysterious. The sleepiness, the warmth, the slight slowing-down: that's progesterone doing its job. Working with that rhythm, rather than against it, is the whole idea behind cycle awareness.

If you'd like to understand all four phases and how your hormones shape each one, The Women's Hormone Blueprint maps the full picture, and The Aligned Woman Journal helps you track your own patterns across six cycles.

About the author

Andreea Mighiu is a women's hormonal health educator and the founder of Zōē. She works alongside medical doctors to translate peer-reviewed research into clear, practical cycle education. She is an educator, not a physician — Zōē's content is designed to inform, not to replace personalised medical advice.

References

1. Progesterone: Natural Function, Levels & Side Effects. Cleveland Clinic. my.clevelandclinic.org
2. Administration of progesterone produces mild sedative-like effects in men and women. Psychoneuroendocrinology. sciencedirect.com
3. Allopregnanolone affects sleep in a benzodiazepine-like fashion. PubMed. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. Questions about your hormone levels, testing, HRT or supplements should be discussed with a qualified healthcare provider.