
HRT: fact-checking risks and benefits
Peer reviewed by Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGPLast updated by Lawrence HigginsLast updated 5 Feb 2026
Meets Patient’s editorial guidelines
- DownloadDownload
- Share
- Language
- Discussion
- Audio Version
- Add to preferred sources on Google
Myths persist about side effects and risks of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for menopause.
Here we fact check the reality behind the rumours and misconceptions and give you the truth about taking this medicine which plays a vital role in helping you live with menopause more comfortably and healthily.
Sign up for our free 10-week Menopause course!
Each week, we'll explore different topics to help you better understand and navigate your menopausal journey, including HRT, diet, exercise, and mental health.
By subscribing you accept our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe at any time. We never sell your data.
What is HRT?
Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is a treatment that replaces the hormones that decrease when you're going through menopause, which can ease the symptoms you're having. HRT is given as two hormones, oestrogen and progesterone, if you have a womb (uterus) - and as oestrogen-only if you no longer have a womb.
Types of HRT
Topical HRT
HRT can be applied topically as a gel, cream, patch, pessary or ring. Topical products are applied on the surface of the skin.
Oral HRT
Tablets that you swallow are a commonly-prescribed form of HRT.
Combined HRT - either in topical or oral forms
If they still have a womb, women take a combination of oestrogen and progesterone hormones in their treatment.
Oestrogen-only HRT
Oestrogen-only HRT is usually only recommended to people with no womb, for example after hysterectomy. These come in topical and oral forms.
HRT risks
Professor Anne MacGregor, a member of the British Menopause Society's advisory board, says that perceptions of risk have changed significantly over time as increasingly safer forms of HRT have been developed.
"Women worry about breast cancer but obesity, smoking, and drinking alcohol regularly carry a greater risk of breast cancer than taking HRT," she says.
"Blood clots have been another concern but topical oestrogen as a skin patch, gel, or spray does not increase your risk of blood clots.
"For any individual woman, the risks associated with taking HRT need to be balanced against the benefits, including symptom control, but also long-term protection against osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and vulvovaginal atrophy - thinning and drying of the vulva and vagina."
Does HRT increase risks of breast cancer?
Yes, it does slightly increase your risk, but the benefits of HRT outweigh the risks. The NHS advises that combined HRT is linked with a small increase in the risk of breast cancer, but there is little or no change with oestrogen-only HRT. Your risk depends on how long you use HRT, and this falls after you stop taking HRT.
Does HRT increase risks of endometrial cancer?
If you still have a womb and only take oestrogen-only HRT, this would increase your risk of endometrial cancer. This is why oestrogen-only HRT is never given on its own if you have a womb. Taking combined HRT with the added progesterone protects your womb lining from the effects of oestrogen, and therefore doesn't affect your cancer risk.
Does HRT increase the risk of blood clots?
Yes, from tablets - but not patches. If you have a history of blood clots you may not be able to be given HRT. Doctors also advise controlling high blood pressure before starting HRT.
Dr Paula Briggs, consultant at Liverpool Women’s NHS Foundation Trust and past-chair of the British Menopause Society (BMS), says doctors may recommend topical HRT to patients with a risk of blood clots: "When we give oestrogen through the skin, it doesn't affect the risk of having a blood clot. So, for a patient who's got a BMI of, say, 30 or more, that patient already has an inherent risk, and you wouldn't want to make that risk any higher by giving oral oestrogen.”
HRT benefits
Managing night sweats
Many women have hot flushes and night sweats during the menopause, which can affect your mood and sleep, as well as being uncomfortable in themselves.
Reducing vaginal dryness
During the menopause, you may notice your sex drive falls, and your vagina may get drier. HRT may be able to help you maintain your sex life and reduce the discomfort of these physical changes.
Osteoporosis
HRT has also been shown to keep bones strong and prevent osteoporosis, which becomes more common in women after the menopause.
How to reduce risks from HRT
After you've familiarised yourself with the different types of HRT, and the way risks vary between these types, your doctor can tell you what HRT you can be given and what they advise.
What can you do if you can't take HRT?
Beyond HRT, doctors often recommend diet and lifestyle changes - for example, stopping smoking and cutting back on caffeine, alcohol, and spicy food. Some doctors might recommend non-hormonal medicines to treat hot flushes and night sweats, and some women find self-guided CBT helps with sleep changes during menopause.
Professor MacGregor says that many people who think they cannot take HRT may actually be able to, depending on the type of cancer and the treatment they have had, and most can use vaginal oestrogen.
"For those who can't take HRT, there are plenty of other ways to help their symptoms and long term health, although it is true to say that they don't provide the same all-round benefit of HRT," she says.
Patient picks for Menopause and HRT

Hormones
How your periods change during perimenopause
Perimenopause means ‘around menopause’. It is the time when your body starts to move towards menopause, which is when your periods stop. During perimenopause, your hormone levels go up and down, which can make your periods more erratic. We look at why this happens - and what you can expect your menstrual cycle to be like during perimenopause.
by Lynn Stephen

Hormones
Do you need a menopause check at 40?
In the UK, the Menopause All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) has suggested seven reforms to UK menopause health policy that it recommends should be implemented by MPs. One of the key recommendations is that a standard menopause check should be integrated into the NHS free Health Check for all women over 40. Here we look at if this check is necessary, what it would it entail, and why the age of 40 has been chosen.
by Amberley Davis
About the author

Ellie Broughton
About the reviewerView full bio

Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP
General Practitioner, Medical Author
MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP (Paediatrics), DCH
Dr Colin Tidy is an NHS Doctor, based in Oxfordshire.
Article history
The information on this page is peer reviewed by qualified clinicians.
Article also available in English, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, and Swedish.
Next review due: 5 Feb 2029
5 Feb 2026 | Latest version
13 Feb 2024 | Originally published
Authored by:
Ellie Broughton

Ask, share, connect.
Browse discussions, ask questions, and share experiences across hundreds of health topics.

Feeling unwell?
Assess your symptoms online for free
Sign up to the Patient newsletter
Your weekly dose of clear, trustworthy health advice - written to help you feel informed, confident and in control.
By subscribing you accept our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe at any time. We never sell your data.
More in hormones
- Are you going through the perimenopause?
- Can blood tests help to manage menopause and HRT?
- Do herbal remedies for menopause really work?
- Do you need a hormone imbalance test?
- How does race affect menopause care?
- How PCOS affects your mental health
- How to ease your perimenopause symptoms
- How to support someone during the menopause
- Menopause and exercise
- Menopause videos
- PCOS diet: What to eat to manage symptoms
- PCOS videos
- Testosterone can boost sexual desire after menopause
- The 'second puberty': why you might be breaking out in your thirties
- The problem with 'bioidentical hormones' for menopause
- Video: How do you know you're going through the menopause?
- What causes menopause dizziness, and how can you manage it?
- What it's like to go through early menopause
- What it's like to go through the menopause when you have HIV
- What's behind the HRT shortage in the UK?