Editorial label review
Hims & Hers Menopause side effects: fatigue
Primary formulary: Estradiol (oral, patch, vaginal) + micronized progesterone; paroxetine as non-HRT option
Quick answer
Fatigue shows up on the FDA labels for the active ingredients Hims & Hers Menopause prescribes — Estradiol (oral, patch, vaginal) + micronized progesterone. This page walks through the labelled frequency ranges, what to watch for, and when to call your clinician.
What Hims & Hers Menopause prescribes and why it matters for fatigue
Hims & Hers Menopause prescribes FDA-approved estradiol in oral, patch, and vaginal forms plus micronized progesterone, with low-dose paroxetine available as a non-hormonal option. Because Hims & Hers Menopause prescribes FDA-approved active ingredients, the labelled adverse-reaction tables from those medications describe the frequencies you should expect. Fatigue / somnolence entries appear across estradiol, progesterone, and paroxetine PILs used by these brands.
Common label-level side effects
Sourced from Section 6 (Adverse Reactions) of each FDA-approved PIL.
- Asthenia (fatigue) is listed at 3–7% in most estradiol combination PILs Section 6 adverse-reaction tables
- Prometrium PIL Section 6.1 lists somnolence at 8% — commonly reported as fatigue
- Brisdelle (paroxetine 7.5 mg) PIL lists fatigue at 5–8% in Section 6
Serious label-level warnings
Drawn from Section 5 (Warnings and Precautions) of the FDA-approved PILs — including the estradiol boxed warning where applicable.
- Fatigue paired with yellowing skin or dark urine — hepatic adverse-event signal on the estradiol and Prometrium labels
- Fatigue with chest pain or breathlessness — the estradiol PIL boxed warning covers cardiovascular events
When to contact your clinician
Contact your clinician if fatigue is sudden, paired with chest symptoms, or accompanied by jaundice — both estradiol and progesterone labels flag these as urgent.
Call 911 if you develop chest pain, one-sided weakness, sudden severe headache, vision or speech change, or shortness of breath — per the estradiol PIL boxed warning for cardiovascular events.
What to ask your provider
- “Which SKU in the Hims & Hers Menopause formulary am I on, and what is its labelled frequency for fatigue?”
- “Is my fatiguelikely a labelled adverse reaction, or something separate that needs its own workup?”
- “Would a different delivery route (patch vs. pill, oral vs. transdermal) change my expected frequency?”
- “What is the plan if fatiguedoes not settle within 2–3 cycles?”
Related editorial reading
- Full editorial review of Hims & Hers Menopause — formulary, pricing, and clinician model.
- Is fatigue caused by menopause itself? — how the transition presents on its own.
- Estradiol medication page — mechanism, dosing, and full PIL notes.
- Paroxetine low dose medication page — secondary ingredient in Hims & Hers Menopause's formulary.
- Browse all side-effect matrix pages — 4 brands × 15 symptoms.
Frequently asked questions
- How often does fatigue happen on Hims & Hers Menopause?
- Hims & Hers Menopause's primary regimen — Estradiol (oral, patch, vaginal) + micronized progesterone; paroxetine as non-HRT option — carries the FDA-labelled adverse-reaction frequencies for fatigue described on this page. Ranges vary from < 1% to 45% depending on the specific active ingredient and delivery route. See the sources block for the exact PIL tables.
- When should I stop Hims & Hers Menopause because of fatigue?
- Talk to your clinician immediately if you meet any of the "when to contact" criteria on this page — most estradiol PIL Section 5 warnings require prompt reassessment. Do not stop hormone therapy without medical input; abrupt discontinuation can trigger rebound symptoms.
- Is fatigue on the FDA label for Hims & Hers Menopause's medications?
- Fatigue / somnolence entries appear across estradiol, progesterone, and paroxetine PILs used by these brands.
- Is fatigue caused by menopause itself?
- Fatigue can appear during the menopause transition for reasons unrelated to hormone therapy. Our /does-menopause-cause/fatigue explainer covers what the underlying biology is and how clinicians disentangle the transition from the treatment.