August 15, 2024 · 7 min read
How Menopause and Snoring Are Connected: What Every Woman Should Know
Snoring is more than a partner's complaint. For many women in midlife, it is an unexpected symptom of menopause — and a signal worth heeding.

Snoring in women has, for decades, been under-diagnosed for two reasons. First, the cultural assumption has been that snoring is a male symptom. Second, women themselves tend to report different presenting complaints — insomnia, fatigue, mood symptoms — that get treated on their own terms without anyone listening to the airway.
Menopause changes the landscape. The decline in oestrogen and progesterone influences upper-airway muscle tone, weight distribution, and respiratory drive. Women who never snored before midlife begin to snore in midlife — and a proportion of them are developing obstructive sleep apnea on the same timeline.
The signal worth taking seriously is the combination of new-onset snoring, unrefreshing sleep, and daytime fatigue in a perimenopausal or postmenopausal woman. That combination warrants an airway evaluation, not another sleep-hygiene leaflet.
A note on this piece
This piece is also published, in its longer clinical form, on the Arch Dental of Woodbury journal.