~30% Skin collagen loss in the first 5 years after menopause: which means this is a real, measurable change, not vanity or insecurity
8 wks Minimum use before clinically measurable improvements in skin hydration: meaning supplements are a slow-play, not a quick fix
2.5–10g Range of hydrolysed collagen used in positive RCTs. Speak to your doctor or dietitian for personal guidance

Why collagen matters and when you start losing it

Collagen is about 70-80% of your skin's structure. It keeps skin thick, firm, and elastic. You start losing it at about 1% per year from age 25. That feels slow until menopause.

Then menopause hits and it accelerates dramatically, and most women don't realize this is coming. Estrogen drives collagen production. When estrogen drops, collagen drops fast. About 30% loss in the first five years after menopause: which is why you suddenly notice your skin isn't bouncing back.

Research Note

A 2014 double-blind RCT by Proksch et al. in Skin Pharmacology and Physiology found that women taking specific collagen peptides for 8 weeks showed statistically significant improvements in skin elasticity compared with placebo. A 2019 RCT by Bolke et al. in Nutrients found improvements in skin hydration, elasticity, roughness, and density after 12 weeks of supplementation. Both studies used hydrolysed collagen peptides.

How collagen supplements actually work

This is where marketing lies. Collagen doesn't travel to your skin intact. You eat it, your gut breaks it down into amino acids and peptides (proline, hydroxyproline, glycine).

Those peptides signal your skin cells to make more collagen themselves. It's indirect. You're not replacing collagen directly, you're stimulating your cells to make their own. That's why it takes 8-12 weeks to see anything. And why the effects are modest.

Marine vs bovine vs plant-based

Most positive RCTs used marine (fish) or bovine (beef) collagen. Marine has smaller molecules, which might absorb better. But head-to-head comparisons don't exist.

Plant-based "collagen" isn't collagen. It's amino acids and cofactors that support your own collagen synthesis. Evidence is weaker. If you're vegan, ask a dietitian about current options. This is rapidly changing.

How to read a collagen label

🩺

A note on evidence quality

Many collagen supplement studies are industry-funded, which doesn't invalidate them but warrants awareness. Independent systematic reviews do support modest benefits for skin hydration and elasticity. If you have kidney disease, are pregnant, or take blood-thinning medications, speak with your doctor before starting any collagen supplement.

Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

References

  1. Proksch E, Segger D, Degwert J, et al. Oral supplementation of specific collagen peptides has beneficial effects on human skin physiology. Skin Pharmacol Physiol. 2014;27(1):47-55. PubMed
  2. Choi FD, Sung CT, Juhász MLW, et al. Oral Collagen Supplementation: A Systematic Review of Dermatological Applications. J Drugs Dermatol. 2019;18(1):9-16. PubMed
  3. Bolke L, Schlippe G, Gerß J, et al. A Collagen Supplement Improves Skin Hydration, Elasticity, Roughness, and Density. Nutrients. 2019;11(10):2494. doi:10.3390/nu11102494
  4. Shuster SL, Black MM, McVitie E. The influence of age and sex on skin thickness, skin collagen, and density. Br J Dermatol. 1975;93(6):639-643.