Safety
Whether you need to stop, how to do it, and what happens to your symptoms when you do.
LoveMyLife clinical team
MRCGP-led
25 May 2026
6 min read

Many women wonder how long they can stay on HRT and what happens when they come off. The reassuring news is that there is no arbitrary time limit, the decision is individual, and stopping is something you can plan rather than something that has to be abrupt. This article covers when and how to stop, and what to expect afterwards.
Current guidance does not set a maximum duration for HRT. The decision to continue or stop is made by weighing your symptoms, your benefits and your risks, reviewed at least once a year. Some women take HRT for a few years through the worst of the transition and then stop; others continue for much longer because their symptoms return whenever they try to come off, and that is a legitimate choice. Age alone is not a reason to stop if the balance still favours continuing.
You might stop because your symptoms have settled and you want to see whether you still need it, because your circumstances or risk profile have changed, or simply because you would prefer to. A new medical reason can also arise that changes the balance. Any of these is a reasonable basis for a conversation; none of them requires you to stop on the spot without a plan, unless there is an urgent medical reason such as a new blood clot.
Most women are advised to reduce the dose gradually over a few months rather than stopping all at once. A slow taper tends to reduce the rebound of hot flushes and sweats that a sudden stop can trigger, and it lets you and your clinician see how your symptoms behave at each step. There is no single correct schedule; it is adjusted to how you respond as you go down.
When you stop, your body settles to wherever it would naturally be at your age. HRT does not delay menopause, so stopping does not mean starting the menopause over; it means your own hormone levels take over. Some women find their symptoms have largely passed and they feel fine. Others find flushes, sweats or sleep problems return, sometimes weeks or months later. Either outcome is normal.
Returning symptoms are not a failure or a sign you have done something wrong. If they come back and affect your life, restarting HRT is a perfectly reasonable option, and the door stays open. Some women cycle off and on over the years as their needs change. Genitourinary symptoms are a special case: because they tend to persist and worsen, the low-dose vaginal oestrogen used for them is often continued long term even when systemic HRT is stopped.
If you are unsure whether you still need HRT, a careful trial of coming off is a reasonable way to find out, and a symptom score makes it more objective. By noting how you feel before you reduce and again over the weeks afterwards, you can see whether symptoms genuinely return or whether you are managing well without it. A gradual reduction, rather than stopping outright, gives a clearer read because it separates a true return of symptoms from the temporary rebound a sudden stop can cause.
There is no right answer that applies to everyone. Some women are glad to be off it; others realise quite quickly that it was doing more than they thought and choose to restart. Treating it as an experiment you can reverse, rather than a final decision, takes the pressure off.
There is no rule that says you must come off HRT by a certain age. When you do decide to stop, a gradual taper makes it smoother, and what happens next varies from woman to woman. If symptoms return and trouble you, you can restart. The sensible approach is to review it regularly with someone who knows your history, and to treat stopping as a decision you can revisit rather than a one-way door.
Clinically reviewed
Dr Seth Rankin · MBChB MRCGP - Founder and Medical Director, LoveMyLife

The numbers, plainly, so you can weigh them yourself.

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The two hormones modern HRT is built from, and how they are given.

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If you want to move from reading to acting, the next step is a short assessment with a doctor on the GMC GP Register. It takes about ten minutes and tells you whether HRT is right for you.
Begin your assessment at this link. Online or in person at Westfield London.