Promo code SPRING2022 will be automatically applied at checkout!

How Diet Can Optimize Your Hormonal Health

Published in Women's Health

7 min read

July 18, 2025
Bowls of fresh food with vegetables, grains, and protein in a balanced meal for hormonal health
Bowls of fresh food with vegetables, grains, and protein in a balanced meal for hormonal health

Hormones impact nearly every function in your body—from how you feel during your menstrual cycle to how well you sleep, manage stress, or respond to food. And while most people know that nutrition affects energy, digestion, and weight, the connection between diet and hormonal health often goes overlooked.

As part of our effort to bring readers a wider range of expert-informed insights on hormone and metabolic health, we’re sharing this guest post from Wisp, a telehealth provider focused on reproductive care. They break down how food and hormones interact, what hormonal imbalance can look like, and how specific nutrients may help support your body’s natural balance.

Your Diet and Your Hormones

We all know that eating a healthy and balanced diet comes with a lot of benefits. Proper nutrition can help you feel energized, keep your digestion running smoothly, and aid in weight management. But one thing we don’t often mention when listing the benefits of nutrition? Our hormones! Hormones play a key role in almost every function of our bodies, so keeping them balanced can help our overall health and well-being.

What we eat can have a big impact on our hormones, for better or for worse. These impacts aren’t always obvious and improving your hormonal health with diet can be tricky. So, let’s get into the details! Read on as we discuss how diet and hormonal imbalance are related, the signs of hormonal imbalance, and how hormone-balancing foods can help.

How Food Affects Hormones

Let’s start things off with a quick science moment about hormones! Hormones are chemical messengers that play an essential role in almost every process in your body, from regulating mood and energy to supporting digestion and reproduction. They’re made in one organ—like your brain or reproductive system—and are transported through your blood to either trigger or stop certain cells in another part of your body.

So, how does your diet affect your hormones? Well, what you eat can influence the production, release, and functioning of hormones. Once broken down in your stomach, food travels through your bloodstream, and its nutrients can act as messengers—similar to how hormones work. Certain nutrients can help hormone balance and production, while others can trigger inflammation or disruption. Examples of how food affects your hormones include:

  • Healthy fats: Omega-3 fatty acids affect the body through insulin and thyroid hormones. These healthy fats can help prevent insulin resistance—a precursor to diabetes—and can increase your T4 thyroid hormone levels.
  • High-quality proteins: Eating protein gives you essential amino acids, which are building blocks of many hormones, that your body doesn’t make on its own.
  • Complex carbohydrates: These foods take longer to digest, which helps stabilize your blood sugar and prevent spikes in insulin, a hormone used in energy regulation.

A balanced diet can help support hormonal health by reducing inflammation, promoting a steady energy supply, and making sure your body produces a balanced amount of hormones.

Also Keep Track of Your Glucose Levels

Glucose fluctuations can impact several hormone pathways—particularly insulin, cortisol, and estrogen. For example, frequent glucose spikes may increase insulin resistance over time, while crashes can affect energy, mood, and cravings. That’s why monitoring your glucose charts, seeing how your body responds to different foods, and using a food as medicine approach, can provide valuable insight into hormone-related symptoms.

Signs of Hormonal Imbalance

A person curled up under cream colored blankets in bed

Okay, so we understand that different foods can affect our hormones in different ways. But, how do you know if you should start adding hormone-balancing foods into your diet? Eating a diet full of healthy fats, protein, and complex carbohydrates is usually not a bad idea. But, this kind of diet can be especially helpful if you’re dealing with hormonal imbalance!

Hormonal imbalance can show up in many different ways, and they’re more common than you might think. Signs of hormonal imbalance can include:

A lot of these signs of hormonal imbalance are also symptoms of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), and that’s no coincidence! PCOS is an endocrine disorder—aka an issue with the hormonal system–characterized by a higher level of androgen hormones. There’s no cure for PCOS, but maintaining a healthy weight with the help of hormone-balancing foods—like the foods found in the Mediterranean or ketogenic diet—can lessen the effects of PCOS symptoms.

Hormonal shifts across the menstrual cycle can also affect how your body processes glucose—some people notice increased cravings, higher post-meal glucose levels, or fatigue during specific phases of their cycle. Learning how your body responds can help you support hormone balance with more targeted nutrition.

Hormones That Can Impact Weight

Maybe you’re already eating a diet full of hormone-balancing foods or maybe you’ve got it on the to-do list. Either way, it’s useful to understand what hormones your food is impacting!

Inside your body, you have more than 50 kinds of hormones working hard to keep your system functioning and regulated. Fertility, metabolism, growth, and development are all coordinated by hormones–and can all be impacted by hormonal imbalance. With all that in mind, let’s look at a few types of hormones and their functions.

  • Estrogen: Estrogen is a super important female sex hormone. It helps to regulate your periods, maintain pregnancies along with progesterone, keep your vaginal tissue healthy, maintain bone density, and so much more!
  • Insulin: After you eat, your pancreas releases insulin to regulate your blood sugar. Insulin also tells your cells to absorb glucose in your blood to use for energy. If your body doesn’t respond properly to insulin it’s called insulin resistance, which can lead to prediabetes and type 2 diabetes.
  • Leptin: This hormone helps control your appetite and maintain your weight. Leptin resistance can make you feel hungrier and eat more, leading to overweight or obesity.
  • Thyroid hormones: Thyroid hormones help regulate your metabolism, body temperature, energy, and the growth of your teeth, skin, and hair. An overactive thyroid can lead to weight loss, and an underactive thyroid can lead to weight gain.
  • Cortisol: Cortisol is most well-known for being the “stress hormone,” since the cortisol levels in your blood increase after a stressful event. But, cortisol also helps control your metabolism.

Best Hormone-Balancing Foods

White bowl of a salad with fresh vegetables, grains and nuts on a beige background

If we’ve covered anything so far, it’s that our bodies’ hormones are complicated! Eating a nutrient-dense diet can help keep those complex hormones balanced and your body’s functions running smoothly. Food for hormonal balance includes:

  • Cruciferous vegetables: This category of veggies includes broccoli, broccoli sprouts, cauliflower, kale, Brussels sprouts, and cabbage. Cruciferous vegetables can help your body better metabolize estrogen, which some studies have shown to lower your risk of estrogen-related cancers.
  • Healthy fats: Salmon, flaxseed, walnuts, avocados, olive oil, and chia seeds are high in omega-3 fatty acids. Omega-3s influence your leptin levels–the hormone that helps you feel full–and have been linked to a lower risk of obesity. Plus, these healthy fats can also help with period cramps by balancing inflammatory and anti-inflammatory hormones!
  • Fiber-rich carbohydrates: Carbohydrates like whole grains, vegetables, and fruits are high in fiber. Eating a fiber-rich diet can improve your blood sugar and insulin levels, impact your leptin and hunger hormones, and help you feel fuller. And, these carbs can help lower the amount of cortisol in your system!
  • Probiotics: Fermented foods like yogurt, sauerkraut, kimchi, and kombucha are packed with probiotics. These foods can be especially helpful for your hormones if you’ve gone through menopause. Probiotics can decrease testosterone levels in postmenopausal women, which might help protect against sex hormone-related diseases and cardiovascular risk.

Foods That Can Cause Hormonal Imbalance

Now that we have our list of hormone-balancing foods, it’s time to look at a few foods that can throw your hormones out of whack. Foods that can cause hormonal imbalances include:

  • Refined sugar: Added sugars like sucrose and fructose can disrupt the hormones that deal with your metabolism. These foods reduce your body’s insulin sensitivity and can increase your risk of diabetes.
  • Ultra-processed food: Processed foods are generally high in sodium, saturated fat, trans-fat, and added sugar. These foods don’t regulate your hunger and satiety hormones as efficiently as unprocessed foods.
  • Alcohol: Drinking large amounts of alcohol can cause hormonal imbalance throughout your entire system, leading to issues with stress, thyroid problems, reproductive complications, and other health complications.

Keeping Your Hormones Balanced

While it can be tempting to place all the blame on diet, a lot of other factors also affect your hormones! The amount of stress you’re under, how much you sleep, and your physical activity levels all play a role in keeping your hormones balanced. That’s why it’s important to adopt a full-body, holistic approach to your health and hormones—and understand that no one is perfect!

Taking small, consistent steps can lead to big changes over time. And if you’re looking for a little hormonal help–with weight management, menopause, fertility, or PCOS—know that Wisp has got your back. Reach out to a Wisp provider to get started today.

Related Article

Read More

Balance Hormones Through Better Insights

A nutrisense member chatting on a video call with her personal expert registered dietitian, with app screen and call screen overlaid on image

Understanding how your diet affects hormone balance is an important step—but everyone’s body responds differently. With Nutrisense, you can track how your glucose responds to meals, stress, sleep, and more, giving you 24/7 insights into how your daily choices may be influencing hormones like insulin, cortisol, and estrogen. Plus, you can work 1:1 via video calls with a glucose-trained registered dietitian whose expertise matches your unique needs. So you can work together to figure out the connection between your hormones and your health, and get specialist, personal guidance to improve it. 

Go Beyond Glucose Data with Nutrisense

Your glucose can significantly impact how your body feels and functions. That’s why stable levels are an important factor in supporting overall wellbeing. But viewing glucose isn't enough. Nutrisense, you’ll be able to learn how to use your body's data to make informed lifestyle choices that support healthy living.

Sign up for insurance-covered video calls to work with a glucose expert: a personal registered dietitian or certified nutritionist who will help tailor your lifestyle and diet to your goals.

With the Nutrisense CGM Program, you can monitor your glucose with health tech like glucose biosensors and continuous glucose monitor (CGM)s, and analyze the trends over time with the Nutrisense App. This will help you make the most informed choices about the foods you consume and their impact on your health.

Ready to take the first step? Start with our quiz to find the right Nutrisense program to help you take control.

#joinnutrisense
Find the right Nutrisense program    to help you discover and reach your health potential.
Kara Collier, RDN, LDN, CNSC

Reviewed by: Kara Collier RDN, LDN, CNSC

Kara Collier is the co-founder and VP of Health at Nutrisense, one of America’s fastest-growing wellness-tech startups, where she leads the health team. She is a Forbes 30 under 30 recipient, frequent podcast guest & conference speaker.

Recommended Articles