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Can a Vegan Diet Get Rid of Your Hot Flashes?

A small study suggests that postmenopausal women who follow a low-fat, plant-based diet can dramatically reduce their hot flashes.
Can a Vegan Diet Get Rid of Your Hot Flashes?
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Women who followed a vegan diet for 12 weeks (including a daily serving of soybeans) dramatically reduced the number of hot flashes they experienced after menopause, a new analysis found — even when many of the foods they ate were highly processed.

The women eating a vegan diet also lost an average of 8 pounds, while a control group (who didn’t change their omnivorous habits) lost only about half a pound.

The study highlights how a plant-based diet rich in soy may benefit both hot flashes and weight management, regardless of the level of food processing, says Stephanie Faubion, MD, the medical director for the Menopause Society and an internal medicine doctor at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida. Dr. Faubion was not involved in the new analysis.

“Given these and the other known benefits in terms of lowering heart disease and cancer risk, women in midlife should consider leaning into a plant-based diet," says Faubion.

Do Highly Processed Plant-Based Foods Still Provide Health Benefits?

In earlier research, investigators found that a low-fat vegan diet supplemented with soybeans reduced hot flashes and body weight.

But that study didn’t look at the quality of the diet in terms of whole foods versus ultra-processed ones. Ultra-processed foods are often high in added sugars, unhealthy fats, and sodium, and low in fiber and other essential nutrients. There’s evidence that, compared with whole or minimally processed foods, ultra-processed foods typically lead people to eat more calories and gain weight.

For the new study, researchers dug deeper into the data from the original study to find out more about what was behind the reduction in hot flash severity. Was it only the absence of meat and animal products that made the difference? Or could the level of food processing also be involved?

In the original study, 84 postmenopausal women who experienced at least two daily moderate to severe hot flashes were randomly assigned either to a low-fat vegan diet with half a cup of cooked soybeans per day, or to a control group that kept eating their usual omnivorous diet.

Women who followed a vegan diet ate a range of foods, for example:

  • Breakfast Cinnamon apple oatmeal, breakfast burritos, and blueberry muesli
  • Lunch Black bean sweet potato chili, lentil and veggie salad
  • Snack Chopped raw veggies and hummus, fresh fruit
  • Dinner Pita pizza and side salad, barbecue-style portobello mushrooms, and hearty chili mac and cheese

Cutting out meat and animal products slashed the number of severe and moderate hot flashes by about 90 percent, from an average of five per day to less than one. The control group, made up of women who continued to eat their normal diet that included meat and dairy, had only a 34 percent drop in their hot flashes.

When researchers dug deeper, they found that plant-based ultra-processed foods such as packaged vegan meats, frozen veggie pizza, or plant-based snack bars didn’t show any negative effect on weight or hot flashes in this trial — they had the same positive effects as less processed or whole plant-based foods.

In other words, what mattered most for weight loss and hot flash reduction was whether the foods eaten were animal- or plant-based, not the level of processing.

Effect of a Plant-Based Diet Was Greater Than Anticipated

The improvements in hot flashes in the vegan and soybean group surpassed expectations, says the lead study author, Hana Kahleova, MD, PhD, an endocrinologist.

These are the kind of hot flashes that are impossible to ignore — they wake you up at night or interrupt your important meeting, says Dr. Kahleova, who serves as the director of clinical research at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit dedicated to saving and improving human and animal lives through plant-based diets.

“Hot flashes have also been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes. So this significant reduction not only increases quality of life, but overall health,” she says.

Why a Vegan Diet May Reduce Hot Flashes

Because the women in the vegan and soybean group lost weight, it’s hard to know for certain what led to the benefits — the vegan diet, the addition of soybeans, the weight loss, or a combination of all three — says Faubion.

“It is well-known that weight loss is helpful for hot flash management,” she says.

But Khaleova believes the power of a vegan diet to improve hot flashes goes beyond weight loss. “The fiber in plants feeds our gut microbiome and produces significant metabolic changes. In addition, the isoflavones contained in soy help reduce hot flashes,” she says. Isoflavones have estrogen-like properties.

“The study group participants also included one-half cup of soybeans in their diet daily, which has mixed evidence to support its impact on hot flashes. Some studies show improvement, but others show no benefit over placebo,” says Karen Adams, MD, a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology and the director of the Stanford Program in Menopause and Healthy Aging in California. Dr. Adams wasn’t involved in the research.

“A vegan diet also reduces the intake of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs), which is the metabolic trash that builds up in our body as we age and has been associated with hot flashes. Plants have much less AGEs than animal products, which helps the body reset,” says Kahleova.

Should You Try a Plant-Based Diet if You Have Hot Flashes?

Kahleova recommends that women who are struggling with hot flashes consider making dietary changes. “Eat plants, keep the fat intake low, and include soybeans for extra benefits,” she says.

Adams agrees that a plant-based diet is less inflammatory than the standard American diet and tends to decrease a person’s risk of chronic illness. “But I would hesitate to promise women struggling with hot flashes that their symptoms will improve solely on the basis of diet alone,” she says.

Faubion says the research is too limited at this point to suggest any particular hot-flash diet. “At this time, there is stronger evidence for weight loss being helpful for hot flash management than any particular dietary component,” she says.

But she notes that a plant-based style of eating offers numerous benefits beyond whatever impact it may have on hot flashes. “A plant-based diet is considered healthy for many reasons, including reduction of cardiovascular disease and cancer risk. That, coupled with weight loss, can certainly be beneficial for many midlife women,” she says.

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Kahleova H et al. Processed Foods in the Context of a Vegan Diet, and Changes in Body Weight and Severe Hot Flashes in Postmenopausal Women: a Secondary Analysis of Randomized Clinical Trial. Menopause: Journal of the Menopause Society. May 27, 2025.
  2. Barnard ND et al. A Dietary Intervention for Vasomotor Symptoms of Menopause: A Randomized, Controlled Trial. Menopause: The Journal of the Menopause Society. January 2023.
  3. Chen L-R et al. Isoflavone Supplements for Menopausal Women: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. November 4, 2019.

Emily Kay Votruba

Fact-Checker
Emily Kay Votruba has copyedited and fact-checked for national magazines, websites, and books since 1997, including Self, GQ, Gourmet, Golf Magazine, Outside, Cornell University Press, Penguin Random House, and Harper's Magazine. Her projects have included cookbooks (Padma Lakshmi's Tangy Tart Hot & Sweet), self-help and advice titles (Mika Brzezinski's Know Your Value: Women, Money, and Getting What You're Worth), memoirs (Larry King's My Remarkable Journey), and science (Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Learn, by Cathy Davidson). She started freelancing for Everyday Health in 2016.
Becky Upham, MA

Becky Upham

Author

Becky Upham has worked throughout the health and wellness world for over 25 years. She's been a race director, a team recruiter for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, a salesperson for a major pharmaceutical company, a blogger for Moogfest, a communications manager for Mission Health, a fitness instructor, and a health coach.

Upham majored in English at the University of North Carolina and has a master's in English writing from Hollins University.

Upham enjoys teaching cycling classes, running, reading fiction, and making playlists.