Supplements and Nutrition After 40: What’s Helpful — and What’s Mostly Hype

Written by Kaz Sharp, Registered Nurse & Women’s Health Writer

After 40, many women are told their bodies suddenly “need” supplements — for hormones, joints, energy, metabolism, sleep, and ageing itself. Shelves and social feeds are filled with powders, capsules, and promises that suggest health can be bought rather than built.

The reality is more grounded.

Some supplements can play a supportive role in midlife health. Many are unnecessary. Others are heavily marketed with limited or inconsistent evidence. Understanding the difference allows women to make informed decisions without fear, pressure, or unrealistic expectations.


First principles: supplements are supplements not requirements

The most important thing to understand is this:

Supplements do not replace food, movement, sleep, or medical care.

They exist to supplement:

  • Nutritional gaps

  • Increased physiological demand

  • Specific, evidence-supported needs

After 40, changes in digestion, muscle mass, hormonal fluctuations, and recovery can influence nutrient requirements — but this does not automatically justify supplementation.

The strongest evidence consistently shows that diet quality and resistance training have a far greater impact on health outcomes than any supplement alone.


Protein: the most impactful “supplement” after 40

Protein is not technically a supplement, yet it is one of the most commonly under-consumed nutrients in midlife women.

With age, muscle protein synthesis becomes less responsive, meaning the body requires:

  • Adequate total daily protein

  • Sufficient protein per meal

Higher protein intakes are associated with:

  • Preservation of muscle mass

  • Better strength adaptations

  • Improved metabolic health

  • Increased satiety

Protein powders can be useful when:

  • Appetite is low

  • Meal preparation is inconsistent

  • Total intake is chronically inadequate

They are not essential — but from an evidence perspective, adequate protein intake is far more influential than most popular supplements marketed to women.


Vitamin D: common deficiency, clear relevance

Vitamin D insufficiency is common, particularly in people with limited sun exposure or advancing age.

Vitamin D plays a role in:

  • Bone health

  • Muscle function

  • Immune regulation

Supplementation is supported when blood levels are low, particularly for bone and fracture risk reduction. However, routine high-dose supplementation without assessment is not recommended.

Vitamin D is best viewed as:

  • Evidence-supported

  • Clinically relevant in deficiency

  • Not a universal fix


Calcium: important, but often misunderstood

Calcium remains central to bone health discussions after menopause, yet supplementation is often overemphasised.

Key points supported by evidence:

  • Dietary calcium is preferable to supplementation

  • Excess supplementation may increase kidney stone risk in some people

  • Bone health depends on mechanical loading, not calcium intake alone

Calcium supplementation may be appropriate when dietary intake is clearly inadequate, but it is most effective when combined with:

  • Resistance training

  • Adequate vitamin D

  • Overall nutritional sufficiency


Vitamin K2: a supportive role in calcium regulation

Vitamin K2 has gained attention for its role in calcium metabolism, particularly in relation to bone and vascular health.

Vitamin K2 helps activate proteins that:

  • Direct calcium toward bone tissue

  • Limit calcium deposition in soft tissues

Research suggests vitamin K2 may:

  • Support bone mineralisation

  • Work synergistically with vitamin D

  • Play a role in vascular health

However, it’s important to keep claims proportionate. Most evidence comes from observational studies and smaller trials, and optimal dosing is not firmly established.

Vitamin K2 is best considered:

  • Supportive rather than essential

  • Potentially useful in bone health contexts

  • Not a replacement for resistance training


Magnesium: modest benefits, often overstated

Magnesium is involved in hundreds of enzymatic processes and contributes to:

  • Muscle and nerve function

  • Sleep regulation

  • Stress response

Some evidence suggests supplementation may support:

  • Sleep quality

  • Muscle cramping

  • Mild anxiety symptoms

Effects are generally modest and vary by formulation. Magnesium is not a solution for fatigue, hormonal symptoms, or metabolic dysfunction, but may provide small supportive benefits in some individuals. Magnesium glycinate is the choice for sleep as it bounds to glycine, an amino acid, with calming properties. It is well absorbed and gentle on absorption. 


Collagen: connective tissue support — with realistic expectations

Collagen supplements are widely promoted for joint, ligament, tendon, and skin health. Collagen is a structural protein found in connective tissues throughout the body.

Emerging evidence suggests collagen supplementation may:

  • Support joint comfort

  • Assist tendon and ligament adaptation

  • Provide specific amino acids involved in connective tissue repair

Some studies indicate collagen may be most effective when:

  • Combined with mechanical loading (exercise)

However, collagen does not:

  • Rebuild joints

  • Reverse arthritis

  • Replace appropriate strength training

Its effects appear small to moderate and are best viewed as adjunctive. For many women, ensuring adequate total protein intake and progressive loading is more impactful than collagen alone.


Creatine: beyond performance

Creatine is one of the most extensively studied supplements in nutrition science. While traditionally associated with sport, evidence increasingly supports its relevance in ageing populations.

Creatine supplementation has been shown to:

  • Improve strength and lean mass

  • Enhance training adaptations

  • Support functional performance

Emerging research also explores potential benefits for cognitive and neuromuscular health, though this area is still developing.

Creatine is not a fat burner or energy supplement. Its benefits are most evident when combined with resistance training.


Omega-3 fatty acids: joint and inflammation support

Omega-3 fatty acids are well known for cardiovascular benefits, but they also influence inflammatory regulation, which is relevant to joint and connective tissue health.

Evidence suggests omega-3s may:

  • Modulate inflammatory pathways

  • Reduce joint stiffness in some populations

  • Support recovery from exercise-induced stress

They do not repair cartilage or prevent degeneration, but may provide modest symptom support, particularly when dietary intake of oily fish is low.


Hormone-balancing supplements: where hype dominates

Supplements marketed to “balance hormones” often include herbal blends or proprietary formulas. While individual herbs may have limited evidence, most commercial products:

  • Lack consistent dosing data

  • Combine ingredients without clear rationale

  • Make claims beyond available evidence

There is little high-quality evidence to support supplements as effective hormone regulators in midlife women. Caution is warranted, particularly where marketing promises rapid or universal results. The thing to remember here is, there is limited research on natural products as they cannot be patented so the big companies do not do the research. 


Fat burners and metabolism boosters: largely unsupported

Fat-loss supplements rely on stimulants and thermogenic claims. Any effects are typically:

  • Small

  • Short-lived

  • Accompanied by many side effects

After 40, reliance on stimulants may worsen sleep disruption, anxiety, and stress load. Sustainable metabolic health is driven far more by muscle mass, nutrition quality, and recovery than by supplements. These type of supplements and are not sustainable, good old persistence and consistency with exercise is what is needed.


Safety and regulation considerations

Unlike medications, supplements are not regulated with the same rigour. This means:

  • Ingredient quality can vary

  • Labels may not reflect actual content 

  • Claims can exceed evidence

For this reason, supplements should be:

  • Used selectively

  • Considered supportive rather than essential

  • Reviewed in the context of individual health needs


What actually helps after 40

When the evidence is reviewed, priorities become clear:

  1. Adequate protein intake

  2. Progressive resistance training

  3. Sufficient total energy intake

  4. Sleep and stress management

  5. Targeted supplementation where appropriate

Supplements can assist — but they cannot replace foundational health behaviours.  

References:

Protein, muscle & ageing

  1. Phillips SM, Fulgoni VL, Heaney RP.
    Dietary protein intake and muscle health across the lifespan.
    Nutrients, 2022.
  2. Devries MC et al.
    Protein intake and resistance training in middle-aged and older adults.
    Sports Medicine, 2020.
  3. Rizzoli R et al.
    Nutrition and bone health in women after menopause.
    Osteoporosis International, 2021.
  4. Fusaro M et al.
    Vitamin K and bone health: evidence and implications.
    Nutrients, 2020.
  5. Abbasi B et al.
    Magnesium supplementation and insomnia in older adults.
    Journal of Research in Medical Sciences, 2021.
  6.  Zdzieblik D et al.
    Collagen peptide supplementation in combination with resistance training.
    British Journal of Nutrition, 2021.
  7. Smith GI et al.
    Omega-3 fatty acids, muscle protein synthesis, and ageing.
    American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2020.
  8. Dolci A et al.
    Creatine supplementation and ageing: evidence and safety.
    Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 2023.

  9. Cohen PA, Travis JC, Keizers PH.
    The supplement paradox: safety and regulation challenges.
    New England Journal of Medicine, 2022.
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