
What to Expect When Your NHS Health Check Asks About Menopause (And How to Prepare)
By the time perimenopause gets named, it's often already been happening for a year or two. That's about to change slightly — because for the first time, your routine NHS Health Check is going to ask you about it directly.
If you're between 40 and 74, you'll already be familiar with the NHS Health Check: a free review offered every five years, traditionally focused on things like blood pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes risk. From 2026, that check is being expanded to include dedicated questions about menopause and perimenopause for the first time in the programme's history — a change expected to reach an estimated 5 million women across England.
In clinic, I hear the same thing over and over: women who've been carrying symptoms for months, sometimes years, without anyone directly asking whether their mood, sleep, or energy might be connected to their hormones. This update won't fix that on its own, but it does mean more women will finally be asked the right question — often for the first time.
Here's what's actually changing, and how to make the most of it.
What's Actually Changing
Starting in 2026, the NHS Health Check will include tailored questions covering:
Whether you're currently experiencing, or have experienced, menopausal symptoms
The type and severity of those symptoms — things like hot flushes, night sweats, mood changes, sleep disturbances, and joint pain
How those symptoms are affecting your daily life, work, and general wellbeing
Whether you've already sought or received any treatment or support
This is a genuinely significant shift. Menopause affects around three-quarters of women, yet fewer than one in ten feel adequately informed about how to manage it — and symptoms can last an average of seven years. Bringing menopause into a screening check that already reaches millions of women is a meaningful step toward catching this earlier, rather than leaving it to chance.
Why This Matters More Than It Might Seem
I want to be honest about something: a single set of questions in a five-yearly check isn't going to replace proper hormonal support on its own. But it does address a very real problem I see constantly in clinic — women who've had symptoms for a long time, but have never been directly asked about them in a way that connected the dots.
So many women I see have already been told their symptoms are "just stress," "just getting older," or "just life" — often for months or years — before anyone asks the one question that actually matters: does this follow a pattern? Having that question built into a routine, universal check means more women get asked it sooner, rather than only after they've already pieced it together themselves or advocated hard enough to be taken seriously.
How to Actually Prepare for It
If you've got a Health Check coming up — or you're due one and haven't booked it yet — a little preparation goes a long way toward making the most of those few minutes with your GP or nurse.
1. Track your symptoms before you go, not just on the day
The single most useful thing you can bring to that conversation is a simple record of what you've actually been experiencing — not just "I've been feeling off," but specifics: when your energy dips, how your mood shifts across the month, how you're sleeping, what's changed. A pattern noticed over a week or two is far more useful to a clinician than a vague recollection on the day.
2. Look for the pattern, not just the symptoms
This is where most self-tracking falls short. It's not just about listing symptoms — it's about noticing whether they cluster around a particular point in your cycle, whether they've been getting gradually more frequent, or whether certain symptoms seem to travel together (poor sleep and low mood, say, or fatigue and brain fog). That pattern is often more diagnostically useful than any single symptom on its own.
3. Note your family history if you can
When your mother or sisters went through menopause, and how early or late, can meaningfully shape how your own transition is approached — it's worth having that information ready if you can gather it beforehand.
4. Know what you want to ask
Health Checks are brief. Walking in with two or three clear questions — "does this sound like perimenopause," "what are my options," "should I be tracking anything specific" — makes it far more likely you leave with something useful, rather than the conversation running out of time before you've said what you came to say.
A Simple Way to Start
If you're not sure where to begin with tracking, I put together a free Hormone Clarity Guide to make this straightforward — a short, simple way to notice your own pattern over 7–10 days, without overwhelm or a long checklist. It's exactly the kind of preparation that makes a world of difference walking into an appointment like this one.
Download the free Hormone Clarity Guide →
And if you'd rather have support making sense of what you're noticing — rather than figuring it out alone before an appointment — that's exactly what a Hormone Reset session is for.
Book a Hormone Reset Session →
Frequently Asked Questions
When does the menopause question get added to NHS Health Checks? The update begins rolling out in 2026. Exact question wording is being finalised by the Department of Health and Social Care, but the areas covered are confirmed: symptoms, severity, daily impact, and existing treatment or support.
Who is eligible for an NHS Health Check? Adults aged 40 to 74 without pre-existing long-term conditions are invited for a free Health Check every five years. If you're in this age range and haven't had one in the last five years, you can contact your GP practice to arrange one — you don't need to wait for a formal invitation.
Do I need to wait for my Health Check to talk to my GP about menopause symptoms? No. You can raise perimenopause or menopause symptoms with your GP at any time — you don't need to wait for a scheduled Health Check appointment.
What if my periods haven't stopped yet — can I still be perimenopausal? Yes. Perimenopause can begin years before your periods stop entirely, and it's a common misconception that symptoms only "count" once periods become irregular or stop. If you're still menstruating but noticing changes in mood, sleep, energy, or your cycle itself, it's still worth raising.
What should I track before my appointment? Energy levels, mood, sleep quality, and any standout physical symptoms (like hot flushes, joint pain, or changes in your cycle) are the most useful things to note, ideally daily, for at least a week or two beforehand. Look for patterns — what repeats, and when — rather than just isolated bad days.
Marie Mulcahy is a NIMH Registered Medical Herbalist and BSc Hons graduate in Western Herbal Medicine, specialising in women's hormonal health. She sees patients in Darwen and Clitheroe, Lancashire, and offers online consultations UK-wide.
