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Last Updated: June 25, 2026
Is estradiol the same thing as estrogen? Not quite — estrogen is the umbrella term for three different hormones your body makes, and each one does a different job. The one that stops your hot flashes isn't the one that fixes vaginal dryness. Here's how to tell them apart, and which one your symptoms are actually pointing to.
What You'll Learn in This Article
Q: Is estradiol the same thing as estrogen?
A: Not exactly. Estrogen is the umbrella term. Estradiol is one specific type of estrogen–the main one your body makes during your reproductive years.
Q: How many types of estrogen are there?
A: Your body makes three main types: estradiol), estriol, and estrone. Each one works differently and dominates at different life stages.
Q: Which type controls my period, mood, and hot flashes?
A: That's estradiol, which is the strongest estrogen and the one your ovaries produce most before menopause.
Q: What's estriol used for?
A: Estriol is much weaker but works really well for vaginal dryness, painful sex, and urinary symptoms. It's also the main estrogen during pregnancy.
Q: Does it matter which type I take for hormone therapy?
A: Yes. Most systemic hormone therapy uses estradiol, the same estrogen your ovaries used to make. For genitourinary symptoms like vaginal dryness, painful sex, or recurrent UTIs, low-dose local vaginal estradiol is typically the first-line treatment.
Estrogen Isn't Just One Hormone
When doctors talk about "estrogen," they're actually talking about a family of three different hormones. Your body makes all three, but each one takes the lead at different times in your life and handles different jobs.
It's sort of like when someone says they need "vitamins". Vitamin D does something completely different than vitamin B12.Same thing with estrogen. Saying "I need estrogen" is a good start, which type of estrogen you need makes a difference in actually feeling better.
The Three Types of Estrogen Your Body Makes
Estradiol: Your Power Player
This is your main estrogen — the one doing most of the work from your first period all the way through perimenopause. It's by far the strongest of the three, 10 to 100 times stronger than estriol. Your ovaries make it as their main job during your reproductive years.
Think of estradiol as the one hormone doing five jobs at once: it runs your monthly cycle, keeps your brain sharp and focused, protects your bones from getting thin, keeps your skin firm, and fuels your sex drive. That's not a coincidence — your brain, bones, skin, and reproductive system are all built to respond to it.
This is the estrogen people usually mean when they just say "estrogen." So when your levels start dropping in perimenopause, this is almost always what's actually happening. It's also why the symptoms show up in so many places at once. Your cycle, your mood, your sleep, your skin: one hormone dropping, but effects everywhere, because it was doing so much.
Estriol: Your Gentle Helper
Estriol is much weaker than estradiol everywhere in your body — except one place: your vagina and urinary tract. There, it works really well. Think of estradiol as the hormone in charge of the whole system, and estriol as a specialist who only handles one department, but handles it expertly.
Your body makes a lot of estriol during pregnancy — it's actually the main estrogen for those nine months. Outside of pregnancy, you barely make any. That's normal. Your body just doesn't need much estriol unless it's growing a baby.
Because it's so mild, estriol is a good gentle option for vaginal dryness and urinary problems, without the bigger, whole-body effects that come with stronger hormone therapy. If estradiol is a strong dose handling the whole body, estriol is a light touch handling one specific spot.
Estrone: Your Backup Supply
After menopause, your ovaries mostly stop making estradiol. So your body switches to a backup source: it starts turning other hormones into estrone, mostly using your body fat to do it. Think of it as your body finding a workaround once the main factory shuts down.
This is why estrone becomes your most common estrogen after menopause, even though most people have never heard of it. And it's also why women with more body fat tend to have higher estrone levels later in life — more fat means more places for your body to make this conversion happen.
But just because it's the most common doesn't mean it's strong enough. Estrone is weak, so it can't really stop hot flashes or other menopause symptoms on its own. It's a backup, not a replacement. It gives you a little bit of estrogen so you're not at zero, but it was never built to do estradiol's job.
| Hormone | Strength | Main Time of Life | What It's Doing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estradiol | Strongest | Reproductive years | Running your cycle, protecting your brain and bones, maintaining everything |
| Estriol | Weakest | Pregnancy (and for local vaginal treatment) | Supporting vaginal and urinary tissue health |
| Estrone | Medium | After menopause | Providing weaker backup estrogen |
The Three Types, Side by Side
- Estradiol affects your whole body: brain, bones, skin, cycle, sex drive — all at once
- Estriol affects one area only: your vaginal and urinary tissue — and barely touches the rest of your body
- Estrone affects your whole body too, but weakly. It's there after menopause, just not strong enough to do what estradiol did
Why This Matters
When you tell your doctor "my estrogen is low" or "I think I need estrogen," what they're hearing is "my estradiol is low." That's because estradiol is responsible for most of the symptoms women experience during perimenopause and menopause: the hot flashes, brain fog, mood swings, all of it.
So when your doctor prescribes estradiol, they're not giving you something different than estrogen, they're giving you the specific type of estrogen your body needs.
Estradiol: Your Body's Main Estrogen
Estradiol is the hormone doing most of the work in your body from your first period until menopause.
What Estradiol Actually Does
In your reproductive system:
Estradiol is what makes your menstrual cycle happen. It builds up your uterine lining each month, triggers ovulation, and keeps everything coordinated. When you're trying to get pregnant, estradiol is essential.
In your brain:
This is huge, and it's something a lot of women don't realize until their estradiol drops. Estradiol helps with memory, focus, and concentration. It also plays a big role in regulating your mood. When estradiol declines in perimenopause, that's when a lot of women start experiencing brain fog or feeling more anxious or depressed.
Throughout your body:
Estradiol is protecting your bones by preventing bone breakdown. It's keeping your skin thick and elastic by supporting collagen production. It's maintaining vaginal lubrication and supporting your sexual response. It's even helping protect your cardiovascular system.
Estradiol works by binding to estrogen receptors throughout your body, proteins that act like locks, with estradiol as the key. When estradiol binds to these receptors, it triggers responses in your cells that affect everything from your menstrual cycle to your mood. Basically, estradiol has been quietly doing a lot of behind-the-scenes work you probably haven't thought about, until it starts declining.
What Happens When Estradiol Drops
This is where perimenopause and menopause symptoms come in. Estradiol receptors are found throughout the body (brain, bone, heart, vagina, bladder, skin) so when levels start to fluctuate and then drop, you might notice:
- Brain fog: trouble concentrating or finding words
- Mood changes: more anxiety, irritability, or feeling down
- Hot flashes and night sweats (the classic symptoms most people know about)
- Vaginal dryness that can make sex uncomfortable
- Your sex drive changing
- Joint aches and stiffness you can't quite explain
- Sleep problems: either falling asleep or staying asleep
- Your skin feeling thinner or drier
Every woman experiences these differently. Some women get hit hard with hot flashes but don't notice much brain fog. Others struggle more with mood and sleep. But they're all connected to declining estradiol.
Why Most Hormone Therapy Uses Estradiol
When clinicians talk about hormone replacement therapy (HRT) or menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), they're almost always talking about estradiol-based therapy. Estradiol (E2) is the most biologically active and potent estrogen produced by the ovaries during your reproductive years, which is exactly why it's the most effective at treating whole-body symptoms.
If you're dealing with hot flashes, brain fog, mood changes, or worried about bone loss, estradiol is what you need. It's the gold standard.
How You Can Take Estradiol
The good news is there are options for how to get estradiol into your system:
For whole-body symptoms:
- Pills you swallow (oral estradiol)
- Patches you stick on your skin and change once or twice a week
- Gels or creams you rub on your skin daily
- Pellets inserted under your skin (less common, lasts months)
For vaginal symptoms specifically:
There's more about choosing between these options below, but just know you're not stuck with one option.
Estriol vs. Estradiol: Which One Do I Need?
If you've made it this far, you've probably already guessed: it depends on what's bothering you.
Estradiol is the one to ask about if you're dealing with hot flashes, night sweats, brain fog, mood changes, or bone loss — anything that affects your whole body. It's the most studied, most effective option for systemic symptoms, and it's what most hormone therapy is built around.
Estriol is the one to ask about if your symptoms are limited to vaginal dryness, painful sex, or recurring UTIs. It works locally, at very low doses, with minimal effect on the rest of your body.
A lot of women need both. They want systemic estradiol for the whole-body symptoms, plus local estrogen for vaginal tissue that needs its own direct support. That's normal, and it's covered in more detail below.
Not sure which category you're in? Get a personalized summary — a few quick questions about your main symptoms and menopause stage, and we'll tell you whether you're likely looking at systemic estradiol, local estrogen, or both.
Estriol: The Specialist for Vaginal Health
Estriol has a very specific and useful role, especially after menopause.
What Makes Estriol Special
Here's the thing about estriol: it's weak when it comes to systemic effects (affecting your whole body), but it's surprisingly effective when applied locally to vaginal tissue.
During pregnancy, your body makes tons of estriol, it's the dominant estrogen for those nine months. But outside of pregnancy, your body doesn't produce much estriol at all. That's okay, because it can be used therapeutically where it works best.
Why estriol is different:
Estriol is 10-100 times weaker than estradiol when it comes to whole-body effects. This is because estriol binds less strongly to estrogen receptors, the proteins in your cells that respond to estrogen signals. It doesn't have the same strong effects on your brain, bones, or cardiovascular system that estradiol does. And it doesn't stimulate breast tissue or your uterine lining as much as estradiol. For whole-body menopause symptoms, estriol alone isn't going to cut it.
But when you apply estriol directly to vaginal tissue, it works well to restore tissue health without having strong effects throughout the rest of your body.
What Estriol Is Really Good For
If you're dealing with any of these, estriol might be exactly what you need:
Vaginal symptoms:
- Dryness that makes you uncomfortable day-to-day
- Burning or irritation
- Sex that's painful because your tissues are thin and dry
- Vaginal tissue that's noticeably thinner (what doctors call vaginal atrophy)
Urinary symptoms:
- Getting recurrent UTIs (this is really common after menopause)
- Feeling like you have to pee urgently all the time
- Frequent urination
- Some types of urinary leakage
All of these fall under what doctors now call genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). It's incredibly common, and very treatable. For mild symptoms, estriol can help, but low-dose local estradiol remains the gold standard for moderate to severe cases, with stronger evidence and more predictable results.
Why Estriol for Vaginal Symptoms?
When your symptoms are limited to the vaginal and urinary area, estriol offers a gentler approach. It improves the health of vaginal tissue: making it thicker, more elastic, better lubricated, and more resilient. And all this without giving you significant whole-body estrogen exposure.
This can be really appealing if:
- You don't need or want systemic hormone therapy
- You're concerned about breast tissue stimulation
- You want to target just the area that's bothering you
- You can't take systemic HRT for medical reasons but still need help with vaginal symptoms
How You Use Estriol
Estriol is almost always used vaginally:
- Vaginal creams you apply with an applicator
- Vaginal suppositories or ovules you insert
- Sometimes it's included in compounded formulas (often mixed with estradiol)
It's usually used a few times a week after an initial loading period. Many women find it really improves their quality of life. Sex becomes comfortable again, UTIs stop happening, and they just feel more normal.
Estrone: Your Body's Backup Plan
Estrone is the estrogen that doesn't get talked about as much, but it's worth understanding. After menopause, it becomes the primary circulating estrogen. It is produced mainly through conversion of androstenedione in fat tissue rather than the ovaries.
When Estrone Takes Over
After menopause, your ovaries dramatically cut back on estradiol production. To compensate, your body starts converting other hormones (mainly androstenedione from your adrenal glands) into estrone. This happens primarily in fat tissue.
So postmenopause, estrone becomes your most abundant estrogen. But here's the catch, it's significantly weaker than estradiol.
What You Should Know About Estrone
It's not strong enough to prevent symptoms:
Estrone provides some estrogen activity, which is better than nothing, but it's not enough to stop hot flashes, brain fog, or other menopause symptoms. If you're dealing with those, you need estradiol.
Higher body fat means more estrone:
Because the conversion happens in fat tissue, women with higher body fat percentages tend to have higher estrone levels after menopause. When estrone levels get too high, there can be associations with certain metabolic concerns.
Doctors don't typically use it in treatment:
Modern hormone therapy doesn't use estrone as the main hormone. It's just not as effective as estradiol. When doctors prescribe HRT, they choose estradiol because it works better.
The Bottom Line on Estrone
Think of estrone as your body's attempt to give you some estrogen support after your ovaries retire. It's doing its best, but it's not a complete solution. If you're having menopause symptoms, estrone alone isn't going to resolve them. You'd need estradiol-based therapy for that.
Matching the Right Estrogen to Your Symptoms
Now you know there are three different estrogens. The question is: which one do you actually need?
The answer depends entirely on what symptoms you're dealing with. Here's how to think about it.
If You're Having These Symptoms, You Need Systemic Estradiol
Hot flashes and night sweats:
These are classic estradiol-deficiency symptoms. Estradiol is the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, nothing works better.
Brain fog, memory issues, trouble concentrating:
Your brain has estrogen receptors everywhere, and they're used to estradiol. When estradiol drops, cognitive symptoms show up. Replacing estradiol can make a huge difference here.
Mood changes | anxiety, depression, irritability:
Estradiol affects neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine. Many women find their mood stabilizes when they start estradiol therapy.
Worrying about bone loss:
Estradiol protects your bones by preventing excessive bone breakdown. If you're at risk for osteoporosis, systemic estradiol can help maintain bone density.
Systemic means the estrogen affects your whole body, it gets into your bloodstream and reaches all your tissues. For systemic estradiol, you'd use pills, patches, gels, or pellets.
If You're Having These Symptoms, You Can Use Local (Vaginal) Estrogen
Vaginal dryness or painful sex:
This is the number one reason women use vaginal estrogen, and it works incredibly well. Whether you use vaginal estradiol or estriol, both can restore tissue health and make sex comfortable again.
Recurrent UTIs:
If you're getting UTIs over and over, especially after menopause, low-dose vaginal estrogen can actually reduce your risk. It helps restore the protective bacteria and the health of urinary tract tissues.
Urinary urgency, frequency, or some types of leakage:
Estrogen deficiency affects your bladder and urethra too. Local estrogen can improve these symptoms.
Local or vaginal estrogen stays mostly in the tissue where you apply it. Very little gets absorbed into your bloodstream, so you're treating the specific area that needs help without giving yourself systemic hormone exposure.
Quick Reference Guide
| What you're dealing with | What you need |
|---|---|
| Hot flashes, night sweats | Estrogen Patch |
| Brain fog, memory issues | Estrogen Patch |
| Mood swings, anxiety, depression | Estrogen Patch |
| Bone loss prevention | Estrogen Patch |
| Vaginal dryness, painful sex | Vaginal estradiol or estriol |
| Recurrent UTIs | Vaginal estradiol or estriol |
| Urinary urgency or frequency | Vaginal estradiol or estriol |
Some Important Distinctions
Can you use both systemic and vaginal estrogen?
Absolutely. Some women need systemic estradiol for hot flashes and brain fog, and also add vaginal estrogen because vaginal tissues often require direct local support beyond what systemic therapy provides. This is completely fine, and actually pretty common.
Oral vs. transdermal estradiol, does it matter?
Yes, and here's why: both work for symptoms, but research shows they carry different risks. Oral estradiol (pills) goes through your liver first, which can increase clotting factors in your blood. Transdermal estradiol (patches or gels) bypasses the liver and is associated with a lower risk of blood clots.
If you have any increased risk for blood clots, transdermal is usually the better choice. BFor clinicians and a lot of women, regardless of their medical history, transdermal is becoming the preferred route because of its safety profile.
Do I need to take progesterone if I'm only using vaginal estrogen?
Generally, no. Low-dose vaginal estrogen is absorbed so minimally that it doesn't stimulate the uterine lining, so progesterone isn't typically needed. Your blood estrogen levels usually stay in the postmenopausal range even while vaginal tissue gets what it needs. This is different from systemic estrogen, where progesterone is required to protect the uterus if you still have one.
Do you need a lab test to get menopause treatment?
Not necessarily. Menopause is a clinical diagnosis, not a laboratory one. That means that symptoms and clinical context guide treatment more than numbers. That said, when blood work does measure "estrogen," it's almost always measuring estradiol specifically, since that's what correlates with symptoms and helps inform treatment decisions. Estriol and estrone aren't routinely tested unless there's a specific reason.
How many types of estrogen are there?
Three: estradiol, estriol, and estrone. Estradiol is the strongest and the one your ovaries make most before menopause. Estriol is the weakest, and your body makes a lot of it only during pregnancy — otherwise it's used mainly for vaginal symptoms. Estrone takes over as your main estrogen after menopause, once your ovaries scale back on estradiol.
What's the strongest type of estrogen?
Estradiol. It's the most potent of the three, roughly 10 to 100 times stronger than estriol when it comes to whole-body effects, which is why it's the estrogen used in most hormone therapy.
References
Chen, P., Li, B., & Ou-Yang, L. (2022). Role of estrogen receptors in health and disease. Frontiers in Endocrinology, 13, 839005. https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.839005
