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    Do menopause retreats work — and why are people paying $15,000 for them?


    Belly dancing, yoga in the forest, traditional Chinese medicine and meetings with a nutritionist.

    These are some of the activities that can be found at menopause retreats, a wellness trend carving a new niche in the tourism industry.

    Menopause retreats are tailored to help women navigate the different stages of perimenopause and menopause, and the array of symptoms that come with them — from hot flashes and night sweats to achy joints.

    Wellness retreats aren’t new, of course, but ever since the pandemic, more resorts are promoting menopause-focused vacations — and more women are signing up for them.

    “Consumers realized they need to take care of themselves. Their health is their own responsibility. So instead of just going on a spa retreat, people started going on very specific purpose-driven retreats,” Lisa Starr, a spa business consultant at Wynne Business Consulting and Education told CNBC Travel.

    Plus, “there’s so many women that are menopausal,” she said.

    It’s quite liberating actually that suddenly people are beginning to actually speak about menopause.

    According to the Global Wellness Summit, the menopause market will be worth $600 billion by 2025, with more than one billion women reaching perimenopause between now and then.

    “Women have [gone] to the spa, we got a facial massage, and body treatments. We said, that’s nice. But now we want more. And I think this was accelerated by Covid,” said Starr.

    One of them is 53-year-old Emily, who signed up for Combe Grove’s metabolic health retreat for menopause six weeks ago in Bath, England.

    Emily spent six days at Combe Grove’s manor house estate, talking with a nutritionist, learning how to belly dance, practicing yoga, and meditating in the woods, alongside seven other women. 

    A happiness teacher, coach and alternative practitioner of psychotherapy meditating with a client.

    Picture Alliance | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

    “Menopause had happened for me coinciding with Covid and lockdown. That was a pretty challenging combination,” Emily, who declined to give her last name, told CNBC. 

    “It’s quite liberating actually that suddenly people are beginning to actually speak about menopause,” she added. Her retreat, which cost around $2,400, also included treatments like reflexology and cranial osteopathy.

    Men included?

    Do menopause retreats help?

    “The one step forward in celebrating this milestone is spending time and resources on yourself,” Hirsch affirmed. “Spending time and money on yourself, where you leave your family, and you go meet other women in the same age bracket, who are maybe also struggling with similar types of things. I think that’s fabulous.”

    Menopause can last for years, sometimes even longer than a decade. And symptoms can take a heavy toll, which may be why women are willing to spend their money on these retreats.

    “You’ve got hot flashes, you’ve got brain fatigue, brain fog, and you don’t have energy, and you want to do something about it,” said Starr, who cautioned against programs that include extreme diets or lifestyle changes.

    “So I think that that makes people more willing to spend, because they feel they will [come back with] skills to cope with it,” she added.

    A menopause retreat is no “cure,” she said.

    “No one thinks they are going to go on a menopause retreat and come back and not have menopause, right?,” she said. “But it’s going to teach you strategies for how to manage better.”



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