The Cosmetic Treatments to Consider During Perimenopause
NewBeauty Facebook Pinterest Instagram Youtube find a doctor Face Adult Acne Antioxidants Anti-Aging Celebrity Chronic Skin Conditions Eye Hydration Hyperpigmentation Makeup View All Eyebrows Eye Color Foundation Fragrance Lip Color Makeovers Male Skin Care Peels Pre-Event Prep Sensitive Skin Skin Care Skin Health Smile Sun Care Treatments Fillers Microneedling Post-Procedure Skin Care Neurotoxins Regenerative Aesthetics Skin Lifting Body Body Sculpting Breasts Butts Cellulite Hair Removal Hands + Nails Legs Pregnancy Find a Doctor Hair Bond Repair Celebrity Dry Hair Frizzy Hair Gray Hair Hair Color Hair Growth Hair Repair Scalp Health Styling + Tips Awards NB100 Awards 15th Annual Beauty Awards 2025 NewBeauty Readers’ Choice Awards Shopping Gift Guides Product Reviews NewBeauty Storefront Wellness Fitness GLP-1s Health Menopause About Us TESTTUBE Search for: Search HomeCosmetic TreatmentsSkin Lifting and Tightening The Cosmetic Treatments to Consider During Perimenopause What to do when skin starts responding to hormones—not products. Allie Hogan Published: Jan 13, 2026 Getty Images In This Article Featured ExpertsSkin-Tightening TreatmentsHormone TherapySurgical InterventionsTED Treatments Perimenopause brings more than just hot flashes—it can quietly change the structure of your skin from the inside out. That transition into menopause “lasts for about 10 years and can be quite debilitating, especially early on when estrogen levels are dropping,” says Duxbury, MA plastic surgeon Christine Hamori, MD. The good news: there are meaningful ways to ease those changes. “Thoughtfully timed interventions during perimenopause are not about looking younger, but about maintaining structural support and helping patients continue to look like themselves as their skin adapts to a natural biologic transition,” adds New York plastic surgeon B. Aviva Preminger, MD. “Perimenopause brings hormonal fluctuations—especially declining estrogen—that directly affect the skin’s structure,” Dr. Preminger continues. “Collagen production drops, skin thins and dries, elasticity decreases and facial fat and bone support subtly shift. These changes are biological and…