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    Home » Mirena Coil Weight Gain: What Science Actually Says — and What Women Are Reporting
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    Mirena Coil Weight Gain: What Science Actually Says — and What Women Are Reporting

    By Jack WardApril 25, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    mirena coil weight gain
    mirena coil weight gain

    In women’s online forums, a certain type of discourse frequently appears, and once you start noticing it, it’s difficult to ignore. A user posts on Mumsnet or in r/birthcontrol. Since her Mirena coil was implanted, she has gained ten, twenty, and occasionally thirty pounds. Nothing has changed in her diet. She’s working out. Her doctor informed her that the coil couldn’t be the cause because the hormones are local, the dosage is small, and there must be another reason. The comments then begin to come in. Thousands or even hundreds of women are saying the same thing. The Mirena coil and weight gain story has become one of those that the medical literature and the women who experienced it can’t quite agree on, and the discrepancy between those two accounts is more pronounced than it should be.

    For those who don’t know, the Mirena is a tiny, one-inch-long, T-shaped plastic device that is inserted into the uterus and releases a constant trickle of levonorgestrel, a synthetic progestogen. It frequently relieves heavy periods, is more than 99% effective at preventing pregnancy, and is being used more frequently as the progestogen component of HRT during perimenopause. After getting it fitted, the majority of women hardly give it another thought. It makes sense that doctors would emphasize that version. However, the issue of weight gain looms large over it. Out of 589 Mirena reviews, about 20% of users reported gaining weight, according to The Lowdown, a UK platform for reviewing contraception. In contrast, the clinical literature typically places the number closer to 5%, with less than 2% of users experiencing clinically significant weight gain, more than 7% of body weight.

    InformationDetails
    Product NameMirena intrauterine system (IUS)
    TypeHormonal IUD (long-acting reversible contraception)
    Active HormoneLevonorgestrel (synthetic progestogen)
    EffectivenessOver 99% at preventing pregnancy
    Duration in PlaceUp to 8 years (varies by use)
    Common UsesContraception, heavy periods, endometrial protection in HRT
    Reported Weight Gain RateAround 5% of users (clinical estimates), about 20% in user reviews
    Clinically Significant Weight GainDefined as more than 7% of body weight, it affects fewer than 2% of users
    ManufacturerBayer
    General Information SourceNHS and FSRH clinical guidelines

    Who is correct, then? The truth is that both could be, which doesn’t satisfy anyone. Everyone gains weight over time, according to studies that compare women using the hormonal IUS to those using non-hormonal contraception or no contraception at all. One kilogram here, two kilograms there, all over a year. Regardless of what’s inside their uterus, women in their reproductive years typically gain weight. However, the explanation that everyone gains weight seems like a courteous shrug when a woman gains thirty pounds in eighteen months, and her food intake hasn’t changed. The dismissal is more of a source of frustration in those Reddit threads than the pounds.

    Theories exist. Levonorgestrel may result in bloating and water retention, which is the puffy feeling that occurs just before a period but lasts for several months. It might alter gut flora, boost appetite, or disrupt brain signals related to self-control. According to some research, it may even reduce free testosterone, which may cause a shift in body composition toward less muscle and more fat. Although none of these have been established with the same level of certainty that appears on the patient pamphlet, they are also not insignificant. According to a small study, women who used hormonal IUSs gained an average of one kilogram over a year, while those who used copper coils gained an average of 0.2 kg. However, when other factors are taken into account, the difference subtly disappears.

    This also has a broader cultural context. Anxiety, lifestyle, or imagination have long been blamed for women’s pain and symptoms. The shape of surgical mesh is familiar to anyone who has read Dorothy Byrne’s writings. Therefore, when a doctor tells a woman who has gained twenty pounds in a year that there must be another reason, the woman is not merely hearing a professional opinion. She can hear the echo of every other occasion when a white-coated person determined that her body wasn’t acting as it should have according to the textbook. The discussion about whether or not the coil contributed to her weight gain is interrupted before it even begins.

    Observing this develop in forums and clinics leads to a fair conclusion that is more complicated than either side wants to acknowledge. For most women, the Mirena probably doesn’t result in noticeable weight gain. In many cases, it probably does result in some change, such as water, mild bloating, or a kilogram or two. Even though we don’t yet have the research to support it, it appears to do more in a small but real subset. The advantages are significant if the coil is effective for you. You can have it taken out if it doesn’t. This is not a lifetime contract. Perhaps the certainty is the least helpful aspect of all of this.

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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward contributes to Private Therapy Clinics as a writer. He creates content that enables readers to take significant actions toward emotional wellbeing because he is passionate about making psychological concepts relevant, practical, and easy to understand.

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