Cycle day 28: pre-period
This guide covers what is happening hormonally on day 28, what to expect physically, and how to set yourself up for an easier day 1.
What is happening hormonally
The corpus luteum has dissolved without rescue from pregnancy. Both estrogen and progesterone have fallen to near-cycle minimum. The drop is the signal that triggers menstrual flow.
- Progesterone: at or near cycle minimum.
- Estrogen: at or near cycle minimum.
- Allopregnanolone: low; withdrawal from GABA modulation continues.
- Serotonin: low.
- Prostaglandins: rising in preparation for uterine contractions during menstruation.
- Body temperature: dropping from the elevated luteal plateau, often 12 to 24 hours before bleeding starts.
- Endometrium: thick and ready to shed; spotting may begin.
What you might feel on day 28
- Energy: very low (▁ on a five-level scale)
- Mood: flat or low; the late-luteal emotional reactivity may settle slightly into resignation as period nears
- Focus: brain fog often peak; sustained attention is hardest
- Body: bloating still present but starting to resolve, breast tenderness easing, low-grade cramping possible, possible spotting
- Sleep: often deep due to exhaustion, but unrefreshing
- Appetite: variable; some women have peak cravings, others lose appetite
If the cycle is going to deliver a "I hit a wall" day, day 28 is often it.
What work fits day 28
The day-28 calendar should look thin. Make it look thinner.
- Closing administrative work. Anything that requires no fresh thinking. Filing, inbox-zero efforts, billing.
- Cycle reflection. The retrospective work that becomes the day-1 journaling. What worked this cycle, what did not, what to try next.
- Logistical prep for day 1. Resupply heat sources, NSAIDs, period products, easy meals. Check the calendar for day 1 and 2; clear what you can.
- Light reading. Absorbing rather than producing.
- Anything that has been postponed three times because it is boring. Day 28 has the patience for tedious that day 14 lacks.
What to skip on day 28
- High-stakes anything. Presentations, hard meetings, big decisions. Capacity is the lowest it gets in the cycle.
- New project starts. The estrogen-rising window starts in 3 to 5 days; wait for it.
- Demanding training. Strength response is impaired; injury risk is elevated; recovery is slower.
- Big social commitments. Energy spends faster; recovery cost is higher.
- Comparisons of your day-28 self to your day-14 self. Different days, different capacities.
How to prepare for day 1
The 30-minute prep block on day 28 makes day 1 substantially easier:
- Stock supplies. Period products you actually use. A backup reusable heating pad or hot water bottle. NSAIDs if you use them. Magnesium and any other supplements.
- Stock easy food. Iron-rich meals that require zero day-1 cooking effort. Soup, stew, lentil curry, a stash of dark chocolate that is not a willpower test.
- Look at the calendar. Move what is movable. Day 1 needs no presentations, no key meetings, no peak-effort training.
- Write tomorrow's journal prompt. What do you want to reflect on as day 1 begins? Write the question now while you have any capacity to pose it.
- Set the next-cycle anchor. When you start bleeding, that is day 1 of the new cycle. Log it. The
cycle phase calculator
updates phase predictions for the next cycle from that date.
If your period does not arrive as expected
Cycles drift. A few days of variance is normal. If you are tracking and the predicted day 1 has come and gone:
- 1 to 3 days late: usually within normal variance.
- 4 to 7 days late: notable; consider stress, sleep, travel, illness as possible factors.
- Over 7 days late and sexually active: take a pregnancy test (or earlier if relevant).
- Repeatedly over 35-day cycles or skipping cycles entirely: discuss with a clinician (rule out PCOS/PMOS, thyroid issues, hypothalamic amenorrhea, perimenopause).
The cycle is information. Treat its irregularities as data, not failure.
If you are not on a 28-day cycle
Day 28 may not be your last day. It might be day 1 of next cycle (for shorter cycles) or still mid-luteal (for longer cycles). Use the
period prediction calculator
to see your predicted day 1 of the next cycle from your personal cycle length.
What comes next
The cycle resets. Day 1 of the new cycle is the moment to anchor again. The hormones have nowhere to go but up. The fatigue of day 28 has a predictable end; the lift of day 5 has a predictable beginning.
Continue to cycle day 1: what is happening and how to plan it when your period arrives.