Menopause changes a lot of things. Sleep gets weird. Patience thins. Body temperature becomes a personal vendetta. According to new research, it may also change what women notice and respond to when they look at men.A study published in Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology suggests that women’s attraction to certain male physical traits evolves with age and menopausal status. Not dramatically. Not overnight. But enough to be measurable.Researchers surveyed 122 Polish women between the ages of 19 and 70, grouping them as premenopausal, perimenopausal, or postmenopausal. Participants rated digitally altered photos of the same 22-year-old male model. Each image tweaked facial masculinity, facial hair, body shape, and muscle mass, allowing researchers to isolate which features drew stronger or weaker reactions at different life stages.What Menopause Changes About Attraction to MenAge played a clear role. Older women were more likely to rate men with fuller beards as attractive compared to younger women. Lighter, less imposing builds also scored higher with age. Extremely muscular bodies didn’t land as well. The researchers suggest this may reflect associations between beards and maturity, stability, or social experience rather than raw physical dominance.Menopause came with its own set of differences. Postmenopausal women rated feminized male faces as less attractive than other groups. They were also less drawn to V-shaped torsos, though that finding was weaker. Medium muscularity was more likely to read as aggressive, while perceptions of social dominance stayed the same.That consistency is notable. Age and menopause didn’t change how women judged dominance or power. What changed was visual appeal, not assumptions about control or authority.Hormone levels weren’t measured in this study, but the pattern mirrors what researchers already know about estrogen and perception. Estrogen affects how sensory information and social signals are interpreted, and its decline during menopause influences far more than the body alone. Traits linked to reproductive fitness may simply lose their prominence.Some researchers connect this to the grandmother hypothesis, which suggests that humans evolved long post-reproductive lives because older women contribute to family survival in non-reproductive ways. From that angle, attraction may move away from high-risk, high-testosterone cues and toward traits associated with steadiness, cooperation, and predictability.None of this suggests women lose interest in men after menopause. It suggests preferences respond to biology, context, and lived experience. What feels compelling at 25 doesn’t necessarily hit the same way at 55, and that’s not a failure of desire.Attraction isn’t frozen in time. It adapts as bodies change, priorities evolve, and experience accumulates. Taste grows up, right along with the people doing the looking.The post How Menopause Changes What Women Find Attractive in Men appeared first on VICE.