PMDD vs Bipolar: Understanding the Key Differences
⬆️One week you’re on fire — energized, talkative, lit up with ideas.
⬇️The next you’re weepy, withdrawn, hopeless, and exhausted.
If you’ve ever lived through this emotional rollercoaster, it’s easy to wonder about PMDD vs bipolar—am I dealing with hormone-driven mood swings or a mood disorder like bipolar?
And here’s where things get complicated: from the outside, PMDD can look a lot like bipolar. Both involve dramatic shifts in mood, energy, and functioning. Because of this, many women are misdiagnosed, misunderstood, and sometimes put on medications that don’t actually address what they are really experiencing.
Both are mood disorders, but PMDD is a hormonally driven mood disorder whereas bipolar is a psychiatric mood disorder.
The key distinction between PMDD and Bipolar is the hormonal predictability..
Bipolar doesn’t follow a pattern. PMDD does.
Why PMDD is Often Misdiagnosed as Bipolar
When doctors or your loved ones see intense highs and lows, bipolar is often the first explanation that comes to mind. It makes sense—bipolar disorder is defined by extreme mood swings that cycle between depressive and manic or hypomanic episodes 1.
But PMDD follows a monthly rhythm.
Symptoms reliably appear in the luteal phase (the week or two before your period) and then ease once bleeding begins 2.
Many women recount being handed a variety of labels over the years—depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, even personality disorders—before finally receiving the correct diagnosis of PMDD. As a result, they were often prescribed psychiatric medications for years that didn’t address the root of their cyclical symptoms 3.
That’s what makes PMDD unique—it’s hormonally driven, not random.
Recurrent mood shifts in PMDD can look strikingly similar to rapid-cycling bipolar II disorder, which is one of the main reasons why so many women face delays or mistakes in their diagnosis 4.
Without mapping symptoms against the menstrual cycle, it’s easy to miss this pattern. And that’s why SO MANY women get misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder first.

The Core Difference: PMDD vs Bipolar
- Bipolar disorder: Women suffering from a bipolar disorder often describe their mood shifts as coming out of nowhere. A period of high energy, reduced need for sleep, and racing thoughts may suddenly flip into deep depression without warning. These episodes can stretch for weeks or months, and the unpredictability often leaves women feeling destabilized and disconnected from themselves 5.
- PMDD: In contrast, women with PMDD experience a sense of predictability—even if they are unaware of the pattern being linked to their menstrual cycle at first. They themselves or someone close to them will eventually start to recognize that every month, like clockwork, irritability, exhaustion, sadness, or rage will show up- in the luteal phase. Unlike bipolar, their baseline mood outside of this window is usually stable and symptom-free. Many women even describe themselves as feeling “like my real self” once their period begins again.
✨ In short: bipolar feels random and prolonged, while PMDD feels cyclical and temporary.
If your emotional highs and lows are predictable and show up in sync with your cycle, that’s a big clue pointing toward PMDD rather than bipolar disorder.
Treatment Approaches for PMDD and Bipolar disorder
The treatment paths for bipolar disorder and PMDD are VERY different—another reason why getting the right diagnosis is so important.
Research shows that young women with severe PMS do not respond to antidepressants or mood-stabilizing drugs typically prescribed for bipolar disorder—underlining the need for a different, more tailored approach when PMDD is the true underlying condition 6.
- Bipolar disorder: Treatment usually focuses on long-term mood stabilization with medications such as lithium, anticonvulsants, or antipsychotics, alongside psychotherapy. These approaches are designed to manage symptoms over a lifetime since bipolar is considered a chronic psychiatric condition 7.
- PMDD: Because PMDD is hormonally driven, treatments often begin with SSRIs or birth control pills to blunt hormone fluctuations. While these can help some women, they don’t address the root causes of PMDD .
Integrative Treatment
That’s why an integrative approach offers another pathway forward. Instead of simply medicating symptoms, integrative care looks at the whole picture:
- Nutrition: Identifying low nutrient status in vitamins and minerals (like magnesium, vitamin D, or B6) that play a role in mood regulation as well as supporting detox/drainage pathways and blood sugar regulation with dietary support is key to symptom reduction and management.
- Rest & recovery: Supporting circadian rhythms and sleep quality, which are often disrupted during the luteal phase driving symptoms to be worse..
- Symptom Mapping: Detailed visual mapping patterns help you understand how hormones and lifestyle factors interact with and fuel your symptom patterns..
- Movement: Gentle exercise or cyclical movement practices to release tension, support detox and drainage pathways, boost endorphins, and regulate stress hormones.
- Resilience & stress management: Tools such as mindfulness, breath work, or therapy to build emotional capacity and safety within the body especially during the luteal phase when our HPA axis (stress response system) is on high alert. Research shows that dysregulation of the HPA axis is linked to mood disturbances such as PMDD, highlighting the importance of stress-regulation strategies 8.
- Spirituality or inner connection: Practices that foster meaning and trust building with yourself and your body help women reconnect to themselves outside of their symptoms.
Unlike bipolar disorder—where treatment is largely about managing a lifelong condition—holistic PMDD support offers opportunities for healing by addressing what the body is missing and restoring balance.
This integrative approach not only reduces symptoms but helps women feel empowered and connected to their cycles, rather than at war with them.
Life Stages: PMDD vs Bipolar
Another important distinction between PMDD and bipolar lies in how women experience major hormonal shifts across life stages.
- PMDD: Many women with PMDD describe pregnancy and menopause as periods of relief. During pregnancy, ovulation pauses and with it, the monthly luteal-phase hormone fluctuations disappear—often leading to a complete break from PMDD symptoms 9. Similarly, after menopause, when cyclical estrogen and progesterone changes stop, women report a profound sense of stability and freedom. Some even call pregnancy and menopause “the greatest time of my life” because the relentless rollercoaster ends.
- Bipolar disorder: By contrast, bipolar does not resolve with menopause or pregnancy. Mood episodes may still occur, though pregnancy and postpartum can sometimes intensify or trigger episodes in women with bipolar disorder [10]. This is why bipolar is considered a chronic psychiatric condition rather than a hormonally driven one.
This difference is another clue: if your symptoms ease during pregnancy or vanish after menopause, it’s much more likely you’ve been dealing with PMDD rather than bipolar disorder.
Why Symptom Mapping is Essential
The only reliable way to tell the difference between PMDD vs bipolar is to track symptoms alongside your menstrual cycle.
This is the clarity piece that most women are missing.
When you map your moods and energy levels against your cycle, the pattern becomes obvious. What once felt like chaos suddenly reveals itself as a hormone-driven rhythm.
That’s why I created my Symptom Mapping Kit—to help women stop guessing, stop doubting themselves, and finally see what their body has been trying to say all along.
Because your body isn’t broken. While symptoms feel like an attack they are actually a communication. Your body cannot slide into your DMs with updates on its needs so it sends you symptoms to speak to you. You just need the tools to understand its language.
Final Thoughts
PMDD and bipolar may look alike from the outside, but when you zoom in on the pattern, the difference is crystal clear. If your symptoms rise and fall in sync with your menstrual cycle, it’s time to explore PMDD—not just accept a misdiagnosis.
Finding the right name for what you’re going through is the first step toward the right kind of support, healing, and relief.
Also you can read more on our PMDD test article on the different ways available to test this condition.
Healing PMDD requires a multi-layered approach:
- Understanding your cycle and your unique rhythm
- Specialized lab testing to reveal your personal imbalances
- Nourishing your body with real, anti-inflammatory food
- Mapping your symptoms with compassion and curiosity
- Regulating your nervous system through movement, rest, and inner work
- And yes, sometimes bringing supplements and herbs like Ashwagandha to gently support you through it all. *If you’re considering supplements for PMDD, this resource explains which ones are most evidence-backed and how to use them safely as part of a bigger picture.
You don’t have to do this alone.
If you’re feeling lost in the hormonal chaos, unsure of where to start or what your body is trying to tell you—I invite you to book a 1:1 session with me. Together, we can map your symptoms, decode your cycle, and craft a healing path that’s rooted in who you are and what you need.
Find us on Instagram @hermoodmentor for more education + resources.
Keep in mind, healing from PMDD isn’t about chasing a symptom-free life—it’s about building resilience and discovering the tools that truly support you.
[Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and should not replace medical advice. Always consult with healthcare providers before starting any new supplement regimen or treatments, especially if you have existing health conditions or take medications.]
References
- American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing. ↩︎
- Yonkers, K. A., O’Brien, P. M., & Eriksson, E. (2008). Premenstrual syndrome. The Lancet, 371(9619), 1200–1210. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60527-9 ↩︎
- Osborn E, Wittkowski A, Brooks J, Briggs PE, O’Brien PMS. Women’s experiences of receiving a diagnosis of premenstrual dysphoric disorder: a qualitative investigation. BMC Womens Health. 2020 Oct 28;20(1):242. doi: 10.1186/s12905-020-01100-8. PMID: 33115437; PMCID: PMC7594422. ↩︎
- Hendrick V, Altshuler LL. Recurrent mood shifts of premenstrual dysphoric disorder can be mistaken for rapid-cycling bipolar II disorder. J Clin Psychiatry. 1998 Sep;59(9):479-80. PMID: 9771821. ↩︎
- Grande, I., Berk, M., Birmaher, B., & Vieta, E. (2016). Bipolar disorder. The Lancet, 387(10027), 1561–1572. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00241-X ↩︎
- Geddes, J. R., & Miklowitz, D. J. (2013). Treatment of bipolar disorder. The Lancet, 381(9878), 1672–1682. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60857-0 ↩︎
- Pearlstein, T. (2016). Premenstrual dysphoric disorder: Out of the appendix. Archives of Women’s Mental Health, 19(6), 961–963. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00737-016-0688-9 ↩︎
- Halbreich, U., & Kahn, L. S. (2001). Role of estrogen in the aetiology and treatment of mood disorders. CNS Drugs, 15(10), 797–817. https://doi.org/10.2165/00023210-200115100-00004 ↩︎
- Viguera, A. C., Nonacs, R., Cohen, L. S., Tondo, L., Murray, A., & Baldessarini, R. J. (2000). Risk of recurrence of bipolar disorder in pregnant and nonpregnant women after discontinuing lithium maintenance. American Journal of Psychiatry, 157(2), 179–184. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.157.2.179 ↩︎
Remember: this post is for informational purposes only and may not be the best fit for you and your personal situation. It shall not be construed as medical advice. The information and education provided here is not intended or implied to supplement or replace professional medical treatment, advice, and/or diagnosis. Always check with your own physician or medical professional before trying or implementing any information read here.