Pregnancy Due Date Calculator

About Pregnancy Due Date Calculator

Pregnancy Due Date Calculator is a free browser-based tool that estimates your expected delivery date (EDD) using Naegele's rule, adjusted for your personal cycle length. You enter the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP) and your average cycle length, and the calculator adds 280 days (40 weeks) with a correction for cycles that differ from the standard 28-day assumption. This adjustment makes the estimate more accurate for women with shorter or longer cycles. The tool also shows your current pregnancy week and trimester if your LMP date is in the past, the estimated conception date, and a timeline of key milestone dates including the end of each trimester and the viability milestone at 24 weeks. Pregnancy Due Date Calculator runs entirely in your browser — no personal health data is sent to any server. It is used by expectant parents, healthcare students, and anyone curious about pregnancy timelines. Pregnancy Due Date Calculator is commonly used as a due date calculator pregnancy and a pregnancy week calculator free tool, making it practical for everyday tasks without requiring any software installation. For related tools, Ovulation Calculator can predict your fertile window and ovulation days, and Age Calculator can calculate age and time differences.

Pregnancy dating has been formalized in obstetric practice for over 200 years, with Naegele's rule (named after German obstetrician Franz Karl Naegele, who published his formula in 1812) remaining the standard baseline method. The formula adds 40 weeks to the LMP date, which may seem counterintuitive since conception typically occurs around week 2. This convention exists because the LMP is a reliably known date while conception is not directly observable. The 40-week count therefore includes the approximately two weeks between LMP and ovulation. For women with regular cycles that differ from 28 days, the standard adjustment is straightforward: add one day to the due date for each day the cycle exceeds 28 days, or subtract one day for each day it falls below 28. A woman with a 35-day cycle should expect delivery approximately a week later than the standard Naegele calculation without adjustment. Ultrasound dating, introduced in the 1970s and now universally available in prenatal care in high-income countries, provides more precise gestational age estimates particularly in the first trimester when fetal size is most predictable. Crown-rump length measurement between 7 and 13 weeks has an accuracy of ±5–7 days, which is better than LMP-based estimates for women with irregular cycles. When the LMP-based estimate and ultrasound-based estimate differ by more than a week in the first trimester, the ultrasound date typically takes precedence. Understanding the key milestones in pregnancy — the end of the first trimester at week 13, the anatomy scan around week 20, viability at 24 weeks, and full term at week 37 — helps expectant parents and their healthcare providers plan appropriate care and monitoring at each stage.

How to use Pregnancy Due Date Calculator

  1. Enter the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP)
  2. Enter your average cycle length (default 28 days)
  3. View your due date, current week, trimester, and key milestones

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Naegele's rule?
Naegele's rule is the standard medical formula for estimating a pregnancy due date. It adds 280 days (40 weeks) to the first day of the last menstrual period. The formula assumes a 28-day cycle and ovulation on day 14. This calculator adjusts the result for cycles that differ from 28 days, shifting the due date earlier for shorter cycles and later for longer ones.
How accurate is the estimated due date?
The estimated due date is a statistical midpoint — only about 5% of babies are born on their exact due date. Most births occur within two weeks before or after the EDD. First-trimester ultrasound dating is more accurate than LMP-based calculation because it measures actual fetal size rather than assuming regular cycles.
What does trimester mean and how long is each one?
Pregnancy is divided into three trimesters. The first trimester covers weeks 1–13 and includes the most critical period of fetal organ development. The second trimester covers weeks 14–27 and is typically when movement is first felt. The third trimester covers weeks 28–40 (or until birth) and is when the fetus gains most of its weight and prepares for delivery.
Does Pregnancy Due Date Calculator send my data to a server?
No. Pregnancy Due Date Calculator runs entirely in your browser. All processing happens locally on your device — no dates, inputs, or results are ever sent to a server or stored by ToolBox.
Does Pregnancy Due Date Calculator work on mobile and tablet devices?
Yes. Pregnancy Due Date Calculator is fully responsive and works in all modern browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge — on desktop, mobile, and tablet. No app or installation needed.
What is the viability milestone at 24 weeks?
Fetal viability refers to the point at which a baby has a reasonable chance of surviving outside the womb with medical support. This threshold is generally considered to be around 24 weeks of gestation, though survival rates improve significantly with each additional week of development. Before 24 weeks, survival outside the womb is extremely rare even with intensive care.
Can I use this if I know my conception date instead of my LMP?
This calculator uses LMP as the input. If you know your conception date, you can estimate your LMP by subtracting 14 days (assuming a 28-day cycle with ovulation on day 14), then enter that estimated LMP date into the calculator. For irregular cycles, the estimate is less precise.

Related Tools

Also Available As