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Menstrual Phase: What's Happening During Your Period

The menstrual phase is the bleeding portion of your cycle. Here's what's actually happening hormonally, what's normal, and what to do about cramps, fatigue, and energy.

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Menstrual Phase: Hormones, Symptoms, and How to Support It
Last updated on May 15, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on May 15, 2026.

The menstrual phase is the bleeding portion of your cycle — days 1 to 5 in a typical 28-day cycle. It’s the hormonal floor of the month: estrogen and progesterone are at their lowest, the uterine lining is shedding, and the body is in a brief recovery and reset window before the follicular phase rebuilds.

Menstrual Phase: Hormones, Symptoms, and How to Support It

This guide covers what’s actually happening during your period, what’s normal, what’s worth investigating, and how to support your body through it.

Quick facts

What causes menstrual bleeding

If pregnancy doesn’t occur, the corpus luteum — the temporary structure that produced progesterone during the luteal phase — degenerates around day 24–26 of the cycle. Progesterone and estrogen drop sharply.

Without those hormones keeping the endometrium stable, the lining starts to break down. Blood vessels in the uterine wall constrict, then relax, then constrict again — and the lining sheds in pieces, mixed with blood and uterine fluid. The whole process is driven by prostaglandins, the same compounds responsible for menstrual cramps.

The bleeding lasts as long as the lining takes to fully shed. Most women lose about 30–80 mL of blood across the whole period — far less than it often feels like.

Why day 1 of your period is “day 1” of your cycle

Cycle counting starts on the first day of full bleeding for two reasons:

  1. It’s the most consistently observable event — the start of bleeding is unambiguous, unlike ovulation or the end of menstruation
  2. It marks the hormonal floor — every cycle begins from the same low-estrogen, low-progesterone baseline

The menstrual phase overlaps with the start of the follicular phase. While the lining is shedding, FSH is already starting to rise and new follicles are beginning to develop. By day 5–6, the period is winding down and the follicular phase is firmly underway.

For the broader cycle structure, see menstrual cycle phases.

Cycle Syncing Exercise: Evidence vs. Hype
Suggested read: Cycle Syncing Exercise: Evidence vs. Hype

What’s typical during your period

Days 1–2

This is the heaviest stretch for most women. Common experiences:

Days 3–5

Bleeding tapers. Symptoms usually improve.

Day 5–7

Period ends. Estrogen is climbing. Most women feel a noticeable lift in energy and mood from here through ovulation.

Period cramps: what’s actually happening

Cramps (dysmenorrhea) are caused by uterine contractions driven by prostaglandins — fatty acid compounds produced in the uterine lining. Higher prostaglandin levels = stronger contractions = more cramping.

What helps:

If your cramps are severe enough that NSAIDs don’t help, you can’t function, or they’ve changed in character, see a doctor. Severe period pain is the main symptom of endometriosis, which is dramatically underdiagnosed.

Suggested read: Perimenopause: Symptoms, Duration, and Treatment Guide

Energy and training during your period

Days 1–2 are the genuinely lower-energy stretch of the cycle. A 2020 systematic review of 78 studies on exercise performance and menstrual cycle phase found that performance was slightly reduced in the early follicular phase (the first few days of bleeding) compared to all other phases.1

A separate meta-analysis on exercise-induced muscle damage found that DOMS and strength loss were higher in the early follicular phase, when sex hormones are at their lowest.2 So intense training in the first 2–3 days of your period may genuinely hurt more and recover slower.

Practical approach:

Iron and your period

Each period averages 30–80 mL of blood loss, which means losing 15–40 mg of iron per cycle. Over a year, that’s 180–480 mg — significant.

Women with heavy periods are at real risk for iron deficiency, which causes:

If any of those sound familiar, see iron deficiency symptoms and consider getting a ferritin test. Dietary support: see high-iron foods and iron-rich plant foods for the food piece, and ways to increase iron absorption for getting more out of what you eat.

Whether to supplement depends on your bloodwork — see should you take iron supplements for the honest answer.

Skin and mood during your period

Skin: Low estrogen during the menstrual phase means lower sebum production, less skin hydration, and a flatter, sometimes dry appearance. The good news is that hormonal acne — which is usually a luteal phenomenon — typically resolves by day 3 or 4.

Mood: For most women, the menstrual phase mood is better than the late luteal phase. The drop in progesterone and the start of estrogen recovery often produces a noticeable mood lift on day 2 or 3. If your mood stays low or gets worse during your period, that’s a flag — it could indicate underlying depression, iron deficiency, or another issue.

Suggested read: How Long Does Perimenopause Last? Phases and Timeline

What’s normal vs. worth investigating

AspectNormalInvestigate if…
Duration3–7 days<2 or >7 days
FlowTotal 30–80 mLSoaking through a pad/tampon hourly, large clots, flooding
ColorBright red to dark red, slight clots OKWatery, very pale, or persistently brown
CrampsManageable with OTC pain reliefSevere enough to miss work/school regularly
Cycle regularityComes within a 7-day window each cycleSkipped cycles, very irregular timing
Other symptomsMild fatigue, mood changesSevere nausea/vomiting, fainting, fever, sudden new symptoms

Bring up with a doctor:

What to do during your period (practical)

A simple framework for the bleeding days:

Days 1–2:

Days 3–5:

What’s coming next

As your period ends, FSH rises, follicles start developing, and estrogen begins climbing. The next two weeks — the follicular phase into ovulation — tend to be the highest-energy stretch of your cycle. Then the luteal phase takes over, and the cycle starts again.

Bottom line

The menstrual phase is the bleeding, low-hormone reset window of your cycle. Days 1–2 are genuinely lower-energy; days 3–5 are recovery. Manage cramps with NSAIDs taken early, heat, and magnesium. Train lighter the first two days but don’t stop moving entirely. Pay attention to iron if your periods are heavy. Anything beyond normal flow, length, or pain deserves a doctor’s input — not because it’s necessarily serious, but because problems show up here first and are dramatically underdiagnosed.


  1. McNulty KL, Elliott-Sale KJ, Dolan E, et al. The Effects of Menstrual Cycle Phase on Exercise Performance in Eumenorrheic Women: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Sports Medicine. 2020;50(10):1813-1827. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

  2. Romero-Parra N, Cupeiro R, Alfaro-Magallanes VM, et al. Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage During the Menstrual Cycle: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. 2021;35(2):549-561. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

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