If you’ve ever wondered why migraines seem to disproportionately affect women — striking with greater frequency, intensity, and duration — you’re not alone. Migraine is one of the most common neurological disorders worldwide, but women bear the brunt of it. Understanding why can bring clarity, reduce stigma, and point toward better management.
Migraine isn’t rare — it affects around 15–18% of the global population. However, the disparity between sexes is striking.
Recent data shows:
Before puberty, boys and girls experience migraines at roughly similar rates. But from puberty onward, women are 2–4 times more likely to suffer attacks, which are often longer, more disabling, and accompanied by greater nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light/sound.
This pattern is a major clue: hormones, particularly estrogen, play a central role.
The most widely accepted explanation is the estrogen withdrawal theory. Rapid drops in estrogen — rather than absolute levels — trigger many attacks in women.
Progesterone and other hormones contribute, but estrogen fluctuations are the dominant factor.
Here are visual examples of how estrogen levels fluctuate during the menstrual cycle, showing the sharp drop that often triggers migraines:
These diagrams illustrate the typical hormonal shifts — the late-cycle estrogen drop is a common culprit for menstrual migraine.
Hormones aren’t the whole story. Women appear biologically more susceptible:
These innate differences mean even non-hormonal triggers (stress, sleep loss) can hit harder in women.
Women often juggle more responsibilities — work, caregiving, irregular schedules — leading to common triggers like stress, poor sleep, and skipped meals. Night shifts and disrupted routines disproportionately affect women.
Women are also more likely to seek medical help and report symptoms, while men may under-report due to stigma, potentially skewing statistics slightly.
Comorbidities (anxiety, depression, other chronic pain) are more common in women with migraine, amplifying the overall burden.
Migraine ranks as the leading cause of disability for women aged 15–49 globally[1][2][3] (measured in disability-adjusted life years). Attacks cause missed work, family time, and social activities — with women experiencing more frequent, prolonged, and disabling episodes.
The economic and personal toll is enormous, yet migraine remains under-researched in sex-specific ways.
The good news? Treatments are advancing rapidly.
If migraines disrupt your life — especially if linked to your cycle — see a headache specialist. Personalised care makes a real difference.
The gender gap in migraines is real, rooted mainly in estrogen fluctuations combined with biological differences in brain excitability, pain pathways, and CGRP signaling. It’s not “just hormones” or “all in your head” — it’s a complex interplay backed by decades of research.
Knowledge empowers. Whether you’re navigating this yourself or supporting someone who is, understanding the why is the first step toward better days.
Have you noticed a cycle connection to your migraines? Share in the comments — your experiences help others feel less alone. And always consult a healthcare professional for tailored advice.