If you have fibroids and have been struggling to lose weight despite doing “everything right,” you are not imagining it. There are specific hormonal and physiological reasons why weight loss is harder with fibroids — and understanding them tells you exactly what to focus on.
Why Fibroids Make Weight Loss Harder
The Estrogen-Fat Feedback Loop
Fibroids exist in an estrogen-dominant environment. Adipose (fat) tissue produces estrogen via aromatase — the more body fat, the more estrogen produced. More estrogen drives fibroid growth, which worsens symptoms, which reduces physical activity, which increases fat accumulation. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle that makes weight loss more difficult at every stage.
Additionally, estrogen dominance promotes fat storage — particularly abdominal fat — by affecting insulin sensitivity and lipid metabolism. Women with estrogen dominance often find they gain weight more easily and lose it more slowly than expected from their calorie balance alone.
The Thyroid Connection
Something that does not get discussed enough: many women with fibroids also have suboptimal thyroid function. The same hormonal environment — chronic stress, estrogen dominance, nutritional deficiencies — that drives fibroid growth also impairs thyroid conversion. A sluggish thyroid slows metabolism and makes weight loss significantly harder. If you have fibroid-related fatigue, feel cold, and struggle with weight despite eating well, thyroid function is worth investigating. The program Thyrafemme Balance was designed specifically for women navigating this intersection of hormonal and thyroid disruption. (Affiliate link.)
Fatigue From Anaemia
Heavy periods cause iron deficiency anaemia in many women with fibroids. Anaemia reduces physical capacity — fatigue at exercise intensities that would previously have been manageable, shortness of breath, reduced motivation to be active. If you are running on low iron, your ability to exercise at a level that supports weight loss is genuinely compromised. Addressing iron deficiency (food sources, supplementation if needed) is a prerequisite, not an afterthought.
Pelvic Pain and Reduced Activity
Pelvic discomfort, pressure, and pain reduce activity — particularly higher-impact forms of exercise. This is not laziness; it is a physiological response to genuine discomfort. The result is reduced calorie expenditure over weeks and months.
What Actually Works
Address Iron First
Before prioritising weight loss, check your iron and haemoglobin levels. If anaemia is present, address it — iron-rich foods (lentils, spinach, pumpkin seeds, fortified cereals) with vitamin C to enhance absorption. A full blood count from your GP is a simple first step.
Focus on Hormonal Environment, Not Just Calories
For women with fibroids, the quality of calorie reduction matters as much as the quantity. An anti-inflammatory, low-glycaemic diet that reduces estrogen load is more effective than generic calorie restriction. Specifically: eliminate refined carbohydrates and sugar (which spike insulin and IGF-1), reduce red meat and alcohol (which raise estrogen), increase fibre and cruciferous vegetables (which support estrogen excretion).
If you want a structured nutritional approach that takes the guesswork out of hormone-supportive eating, The Smoothie Diet is a practical 21-day programme built around exactly these principles — hormone-supportive, anti-inflammatory nutrition in an easy daily format. (Affiliate link.)
Exercise That Works With Your Symptoms
Consistent moderate exercise — particularly walking, swimming, and Pilates — reduces body fat, lowers systemic inflammation, and regulates cortisol without aggravating pelvic symptoms. See our full guide on exercises for fibroids.
Realistic Expectations
Weight loss with fibroids is possible — but it is genuinely slower and harder than for women without the hormonal burden. Track non-scale measures (waist circumference, energy levels, period heaviness) which often improve before weight does. The goal is not just a smaller number on the scale — it is a hormonal environment that supports both weight management and reduced fibroid activity simultaneously.
Related reading: Fibroid Symptoms Checklist: 12 Signs You Should Not Ignore · Fibroid Size: What The Measurements On Your Ultrasound Report Actually Mean · How To Talk To Your Doctor About Fibroids: Getting The Conversation Right