Pregnancy Due Date
Calculate your estimated due date (EDD) and milestones.
Most pregnancies last around 280 days (40 weeks) from the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP).
If you know the exact date of conception, your due date is calculated as 266 days (38 weeks) from that day.
Ready to Calculate
Select a calculation method and enter your dates to see your timeline.
Estimated Due Date (EDD)
Gestational Age
0 Wks, 0 Days
Days Remaining
0 Days
Current Phase
First Trimester
A pregnancy due date helps you understand when your baby may arrive and how far along you are in pregnancy. For many expecting parents, it is one of the first dates they want to know after a positive pregnancy test.
The Pregnancy Due Date Calculator helps you estimate your baby’s expected due date using the date you know best. You can usually calculate from the first day of your last menstrual period, conception date, ovulation date, IVF transfer date, or ultrasound dating if those options are available in the tool.
The result is an estimate, not a fixed delivery date. Most babies do not arrive exactly on their due date. Still, the estimate is very useful for tracking pregnancy weeks, understanding trimesters, planning prenatal visits, and preparing for important pregnancy milestones.
What Is a Pregnancy Due Date?
A pregnancy due date is the estimated date when your baby may be born. It is also called an estimated due date, expected due date, estimated delivery date, or EDD.
The most common method counts pregnancy from the first day of your last menstrual period, also known as LMP. This may feel confusing because conception usually happens later, but LMP is widely used because many people remember when their last period started more easily than the exact day they conceived.
By standard pregnancy dating, the estimated due date is commonly calculated as 280 days, or 40 weeks, from the first day of the last menstrual period. This method assumes a regular 28-day menstrual cycle with ovulation around the middle of the cycle.
What This Pregnancy Due Date Tool Does
This tool gives you a fast estimate of your pregnancy timeline. Depending on the available input options, it may help you find:
- Estimated pregnancy due date
- Current pregnancy week
- Approximate trimester
- Days or weeks remaining until the due date
- Estimated conception timing
- Pregnancy timeline based on LMP, conception, ovulation, IVF, or ultrasound date
This is useful when you want a quick answer without manually counting weeks on a calendar.
Who Should Use This Calculator?
Use this calculator if you:
- Recently found out you are pregnant
- Want to estimate your baby’s expected arrival date
- Need to know how many weeks pregnant you may be
- Want to understand your trimester
- Have a known last menstrual period date
- Know your possible conception or ovulation date
- Used IVF and want a transfer-based due date estimate
- Want a simple date estimate before your first prenatal appointment
This calculator is helpful for planning, but it does not replace medical care. A doctor, midwife, or qualified healthcare provider can confirm or adjust your due date, especially after an ultrasound.
How to Use the Pregnancy Due Date Calculator
1. Choose Your Calculation Method
Start by selecting the method that matches the information you have. The most common option is last menstrual period, but some users may prefer conception date, ovulation date, IVF transfer date, or ultrasound dating.
2. Enter the Correct Date
If you choose the last menstrual period method, enter the first day your last period started. Do not enter the last day of bleeding.
If you choose conception date, enter the date you believe conception happened. If you used IVF, enter the transfer date and embryo age if the calculator asks for it.
3. Add Cycle Length If Needed
Some due date calculators allow you to enter your average menstrual cycle length. This matters because not everyone has a 28-day cycle. The NHS due date calculator, for example, includes cycle length because a shorter or longer cycle can affect the estimate.
4. Click Calculate
After entering your details, click the calculate button. The tool will estimate your due date and related pregnancy timing.
5. Review Your Result
Look at the estimated due date, pregnancy week, trimester, and any other result shown. Use it as a planning guide, then confirm details with your healthcare provider.
Pregnancy Due Date Calculation Methods
Last Menstrual Period Method
This is the most widely used method.
Formula:
Due Date = First Day of Last Menstrual Period + 280 Days
This equals 40 weeks of pregnancy. It works best when you know your LMP date and have a fairly regular cycle.
Conception Date Method
If you know the likely conception date, the calculator may estimate your due date by adding about 266 days, or 38 weeks.
Formula:
Due Date = Conception Date + 266 Days
This is because conception usually happens around two weeks after the start of the last period in a typical 28-day cycle.
Ovulation Date Method
If you track ovulation, the calculator can estimate your due date from the ovulation date. This is useful for people who use ovulation tests, basal body temperature tracking, or fertility apps.
IVF Transfer Method
IVF pregnancy dating is different because the embryo transfer date and embryo age are known. A due date may be estimated based on whether the embryo was transferred on day 3, day 5, or another stage.
This can make IVF due date estimates more specific than natural conception estimates, but your fertility clinic or healthcare provider should still confirm the official pregnancy dating.
Ultrasound Dating
An early ultrasound can help confirm how far along you are. Mayo Clinic notes that a healthcare professional can confirm pregnancy dating with an ultrasound during the first trimester.
Ultrasound dating may be especially helpful if you do not remember your last period date, have irregular cycles, or your LMP-based estimate does not match your pregnancy measurements.
How to Understand Your Result
Estimated Due Date
This is the date your pregnancy reaches around 40 weeks based on the selected method. It does not mean your baby will definitely be born on that exact day.
Pregnancy Week
Your pregnancy week tells you how far along you are. For example, if the result says 10 weeks pregnant, it usually means about 10 weeks have passed since the first day of your last period.
Trimester
Pregnancy is commonly divided into three trimesters:
- First trimester: early pregnancy
- Second trimester: middle stage of pregnancy
- Third trimester: later stage before birth
Your calculator result may show which trimester you are currently in.
Time Remaining
The calculator may also show how many weeks or days are left until your estimated due date. This can help with planning appointments, preparing essentials, and tracking important pregnancy stages.
Pregnancy Due Date Example
Let’s say the first day of your last menstrual period was March 10.
Using the common LMP method:
March 10 + 280 days = around December 15
So your estimated due date would be around December 15.
If your cycle is longer than 28 days, the estimate may move slightly later. If your cycle is shorter, the estimate may move slightly earlier. This is why cycle length can improve the estimate when that option is available.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using the Last Day of Your Period
For LMP-based calculation, enter the first day your last period started, not the day it ended.
Treating the Due Date as a Guaranteed Birth Date
The due date is an estimate. Babies can be born before or after that date.
Ignoring Irregular Cycles
If your menstrual cycle is irregular, LMP-based dating may be less accurate. Ultrasound dating may give a better estimate.
Confusing Pregnancy Age With Baby’s Actual Age
Pregnancy weeks are usually counted from the last menstrual period, not from conception. This means the pregnancy week count is often about two weeks ahead of the baby’s actual developmental age.
Using Conception Date Without Being Sure
Unless conception was medically tracked or you are very confident about the timing, LMP or ultrasound dating may be more reliable.
Accuracy Tips for Better Due Date Estimates
Use the Date You Know Best
If you clearly remember your last period start date, use LMP. If you know your IVF transfer date, use IVF. If your provider gave you an ultrasound-based gestational age, use that if the tool supports it.
Enter Your Average Cycle Length
A 28-day cycle is common as a default, but it is not correct for everyone. If your average cycle is 25, 30, 32, or 35 days, entering that information can improve the estimate.
Confirm With a Healthcare Provider
A calculator gives a useful estimate, but your official due date should come from your healthcare provider. This is especially important if you have irregular periods, uncertain dates, IVF pregnancy, bleeding, pregnancy complications, or a result that does not match your ultrasound.
Save the Result for Planning
Once you have an estimate, you can use it to plan prenatal appointments, trimester tracking, pregnancy announcements, work planning, and baby preparation.
Helpful Details Many Due Date Pages Miss
Your Due Date May Change
It is normal for a provider to adjust the due date after reviewing ultrasound measurements or medical history.
LMP Dating Assumes a Regular Cycle
The standard 280-day method assumes a regular 28-day cycle. If your cycle is much shorter or longer, the estimate may need adjustment.
IVF Dating Should Not Be Treated Like LMP Dating
IVF due dates use transfer timing and embryo age, so the calculation is different from natural conception.
A Due Date Is Better Understood as a Time Window
Instead of thinking of your due date as one exact day, it is better to treat it as the center of an estimated birth window.
Calculator Results Are for Planning, Not Diagnosis
Use the tool for quick estimation and planning. For medical concerns, symptoms, or official pregnancy dating, speak with your healthcare provider.
Why Use This Pregnancy Due Date Calculator?
This calculator saves time and makes pregnancy timing easier to understand. It removes manual counting and gives you a clear estimate in seconds.
You can use it to:
- Estimate your baby’s expected arrival date
- Find your current pregnancy week
- Understand your trimester
- Plan prenatal care discussions
- Track pregnancy milestones
- Compare LMP, conception, IVF, or ultrasound-based estimates
- Prepare for the months ahead with more confidence
You may also find pregnancy week calculator, conception calculator, ovulation calculator, and fertility calculator helpful for related pregnancy and fertility planning.
When to Use Official Medical Resources
Because pregnancy dating affects prenatal care, it can be helpful to link users to official medical guidance when needed. For this article, the most useful external link placements are:
- Link “estimated due date” to an official pregnancy dating resource, such as ACOG.
- Link “first-trimester ultrasound” to a trusted health source, such as Mayo Clinic or NHS.
- Link “cycle length” to an official pregnancy due date tool or guidance page, such as NHS.
Do not add too many external links. One or two official health links are enough for trust and accuracy.
Final Thoughts
The Pregnancy Due Date Calculator gives you a simple way to estimate your baby’s due date, pregnancy week, and trimester. It is especially useful when you want a quick answer based on your last period, conception date, ovulation date, IVF transfer, or ultrasound timing.
Use the result as a helpful starting point, then confirm your official due date with your healthcare provider.
FAQs About Pregnancy Due Date
How do I calculate my pregnancy due date?
The most common method is to add 280 days, or 40 weeks, to the first day of your last menstrual period.
Is my due date the exact day my baby will be born?
No. A due date is an estimate. Many babies are born before or after the estimated due date.
What date should I enter in the calculator?
If using the LMP method, enter the first day your last period started. If using another method, enter the conception date, ovulation date, IVF transfer date, or ultrasound date as requested by the tool.
Why is pregnancy counted from my last period?
Pregnancy is usually counted from the first day of the last menstrual period because it is often easier to identify than the exact conception date.
Can my due date change after an ultrasound?
Yes. Your healthcare provider may adjust your due date based on ultrasound measurements, especially in early pregnancy.
What if I have irregular periods?
If your periods are irregular, a due date calculator can still give an estimate, but it may be less accurate. Ultrasound dating may be more helpful.
Is conception date more accurate than last period date?
It can be useful if you know the exact date, but many people are not sure when conception happened. LMP and ultrasound dating are commonly used for pregnancy tracking.
Can this calculator be used for IVF pregnancy?
Yes, if the calculator includes IVF options. IVF due date estimates usually depend on embryo transfer date and embryo age.
What does 40 weeks pregnant mean?
It usually means 40 weeks from the first day of your last menstrual period, not 40 weeks from conception.
Should I contact a doctor after calculating my due date?
Yes. A calculator can estimate your date, but a healthcare provider can confirm pregnancy timing and guide your next steps.
Calculate Your Pregnancy Due Date Now
Enter the date you know best and use the Pregnancy Due Date Calculator to estimate your baby’s expected arrival date, pregnancy week, and trimester. It only takes a few seconds and gives you a clear starting point for tracking your pregnancy timeline.