Calculate your due date, track your pregnancy week by week, and discover important milestones throughout your journey to motherhood.
A pregnancy calculator is a specialized tool that estimates your gestational age (how many weeks pregnant you are) and your estimated due date (EDD). It uses various inputs such as the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP), conception date, ultrasound measurements, or IVF transfer date to provide accurate pregnancy timeline information.
This calculator provides a comprehensive pregnancy timeline broken down by weeks and trimesters, showing you where you are in your pregnancy journey and what to expect next. It includes important milestones, developmental stages, and key prenatal appointments you should schedule.
Our pregnancy calculator follows standard clinical practice, defining pregnancy length as approximately 40 weeks (280 days) from the last menstrual period for women with regular 28-day cycles. For those with different cycle lengths or using assisted reproduction, the calculator adjusts accordingly to provide the most accurate estimate possible.
Calculate your pregnancy using various methods including last menstrual period, due date, conception date, ultrasound measurements, or IVF transfer date. This flexibility ensures accuracy regardless of your situation or available information.
For women with cycles that aren't exactly 28 days, our calculator adjusts the due date calculation based on your specific cycle length (22-35 days), providing more personalized and accurate results.
View your complete pregnancy journey broken down by trimesters, with exact start and end dates for each phase. Track your current week and day of pregnancy, and see how many days remain until your due date.
Discover key pregnancy milestones with specific dates, including recommended prenatal visits, screening tests, viability markers, and trimester transitions. Plan ahead for important appointments and tests.
For pregnancies conceived through IVF or assisted reproduction, calculate based on embryo transfer date and embryo age (Day 3, 5, or 6) for the most clinically accurate dating.
Clinical practice defines pregnancy as approximately 40 weeks (280 days) from the last menstrual period for women with regular 28-day cycles. However, only about 5% of babies are born on their exact calculated due date. Most births occur within a two-week window around the estimated due date, which is completely normal.
First-trimester ultrasound is more accurate than LMP-based calculations for establishing gestational age and due date. While our calculator provides helpful estimates, ultrasound-based dating performed by healthcare professionals should be considered the gold standard, especially for women with irregular cycles or uncertain LMP dates.
Women with cycles shorter or longer than 28 days ovulate earlier or later in their cycle, which affects conception timing and due date calculation. Our calculator accounts for this by adjusting the ovulation day based on your specific cycle length, providing more personalized results.
For IVF pregnancies, dating can be more precise because the exact conception date is known. The calculator accounts for embryo age at transfer (typically Day 3, 5, or 6) to provide accurate gestational age and due date estimates that align with clinical IVF pregnancy dating protocols.
Your current week and day of pregnancy (e.g., '12 weeks 3 days') represents how far along you are. Pregnancy is counted from the first day of your last menstrual period, not from conception, which typically occurs about two weeks later.
Pregnancy is divided into three trimesters: First trimester (weeks 1-13), Second trimester (weeks 14-27), and Third trimester (weeks 28-40+). Each trimester has distinct developmental milestones and maternal changes.
Your due date is an estimate, not a deadline. Full-term pregnancy is considered 37-42 weeks. Most healthcare providers consider delivery between 39-40 weeks ideal, but babies can safely arrive anytime in the full-term window.
The milestone dates shown are typical recommendations for prenatal care and testing. Your healthcare provider may adjust these based on your individual health history, risk factors, and pregnancy progression.
Our calculator provides estimates based on standard clinical formulas. For LMP-based calculations with regular cycles, accuracy is typically within a few days. However, ultrasound dating in the first trimester is more accurate and should be used to confirm or adjust the estimated due date. Factors like irregular cycles, recent hormonal contraception, or uncertain dates can affect accuracy.
Doctors often adjust due dates based on first-trimester ultrasound measurements, which are more accurate than LMP-based calculations. If there's a significant difference (more than 5-7 days) between ultrasound and LMP dating, most providers will use the ultrasound date. Your doctor may also have additional information about your cycle or conception timing that affects the calculation.
If you don't remember your LMP, try using the conception date method if you know approximately when conception occurred. Alternatively, select the ultrasound method if you've had an early pregnancy scan. Your healthcare provider can also help establish gestational age through physical examination and ultrasound.
Yes, but results may be less accurate. If your cycles are consistently irregular, the conception date or ultrasound methods will provide more reliable estimates. You can also try adjusting the cycle length in the Last Period method to match your typical cycle, though this works best for cycles that are consistently longer or shorter than 28 days.
Full term is defined as 37-42 weeks of pregnancy. However, there are important distinctions: Early term (37-38 weeks), Full term (39-40 weeks), Late term (41 weeks), and Post term (42+ weeks). Babies born at 39-40 weeks generally have the best outcomes, which is why many providers aim for delivery in this window.
Your due date is an estimate, not a guarantee. Only about 5% of babies arrive on their exact due date. It's better to think of your due date as the middle of a 4-5 week window (from 38 to 42 weeks) when your baby might arrive. Plan important events and work arrangements with this flexibility in mind.
This calculator is based on established clinical guidelines and research: