Due Date Calculator

Pregnancy timing can feel confusing because “conception date” and “pregnancy weeks” are counted differently. Conception is the approximate day an egg is fertilized, while most medical timelines start from the first day of the last menstrual period (LMP). This guide explains both, shows the standard formulas, and helps you understand what a calculator is estimating.

What Is the Conception Date?

The conception date is the approximate day fertilization happens (sperm meets egg). It usually occurs around ovulation, not necessarily the day of intercourse, because sperm can survive for 5 days, and the egg is viable for 24 hours after ovulation.

When Does Conception Usually Happen?

In many cycles, ovulation occurs about 14 days before the next period, but that timing can shift with cycle length, stress, illness, and hormonal variation. That’s why conception is best understood as a likely window, not a guaranteed single day.

Conception Date vs Pregnancy Weeks

Most clinicians date pregnancy from LMP, not conception. That means at the time fertilization happens, you’re often counted as about 2 weeks pregnant on the medical timeline.

How to Estimate Your Conception Date

You can estimate conception using whichever input you trust most:

1) Using LMP and Cycle Length (simple estimate)

A common estimate is:

Conception ≈ LMP + (Cycle length − 14 days)

Example (simple):

  • LMP = March 1
  • Cycle length = 30 days
  • 30 − 14 = 16
  • March 1 + 16 days = March 17 (estimated conception date)

2) Using Ovulation Tracking

If you tracked ovulation (LH kits/BBT/cervical mucus), conception is most likely on ovulation day or within the fertile window because sperm can live 3–5 days and the egg about 24 hours.

3) Using Early Ultrasound Scan (best for confirming dating)

A first-trimester ultrasound is the most accurate way to establish gestational age and can refine the estimated timing especially when cycles are irregular or LMP is uncertain.

4) Using a Known Due Date (reverse estimate)

If you already have an EDD, a common reverse estimate is:

Conception ≈ Due date − 266 days (38 weeks)

MethodBased OnTypical UseAccuracy
LMPFirst day of last periodDefault if knownGood if cycles regular
Conception dateKnown ovulation/fertilizationMore precise when knownBetter for irregular cycles
UltrasoundFetal size early pregnancyMost accurateBest for uncertain LMP
IVF TransferEmbryo stage & transfer dateVery preciseClinic-confirmed

Pregnancy Dating Formulas

  1. Estimated Due Date (EDD) from Last Menstrual Period
    • EDD = First day of last period + 280 days (40 weeks)
  2. Gestational Age from Last Menstrual Period
    • Gestational age (weeks) = Weeks since first day of last period
  3. Gestational Age by Crown-Rump Length (CRL) – First Trimester
    • Gestational age (weeks) = 5.2876 + (0.1584 × CRL)
      − (0.0007 × CRL²)
  4. Gestational Age by Biparietal Diameter (BPD) – Second Trimester
    • Gestational age (days) = (2 × BPD) + 44.2
  5. Gestational Age by Head Circumference (HC) – Second Trimester
    • Gestational age (weeks) = 1.854
      + (0.010451 × HC)
      − (0.000029919 × HC²)
      + (0.000000043156 × HC³)
MethodWhen It’s UsedWhat It Measures
LMPEveryone (best if regular cycle)Weeks since last period
CRLFirst trimesterLength of embryo
BPDSecond trimesterWidth of baby’s head
HCSecond/third trimesterHead circumference

What Is a Due Date (EDD)?

A due date (Estimated Date of Delivery, EDD) is the best estimate of when delivery might occur. It helps plan prenatal care and timing of milestones, but it is not a guaranteed deadline.

How Due Dates Are Calculated

Method A: From LMP (most common)

Standard clinical dating counts:

EDD ≈ LMP + 280 days (40 weeks)

A quick calendar method (Naegele’s rule) is:

  • Add 7 days to LMP
  • Subtract 3 months
  • Adjust the year if needed

Method B: From Conception (if you know it)

If you figure out your conception/ovulation date:

EDD ≈ Conception date + 266 days (38 weeks)

Method C: IVF Dating (most precise timing)

IVF dating is based on the transfer date and embryo age (your fertility clinic typically provides the official EDD).

Method D: Ultrasound Dating (confirming or adjusting)

If LMP dating and ultrasound differ by a meaningful amount early on, clinicians may “redate” based on the ultrasound because it’s most reliable in the first trimester.

Why Due Dates Aren’t Exact

Even strong calculators can’t guarantee an exact day because:

  • Ovulation varies cycle-to-cycle
  • Sperm and egg survival create a fertile window
  • Implantation timing differs
  • Ultrasound can refine early dating but still provides an estimate

FAQs

Pregnancy usually lasts 40 weeks. If you are 6 weeks pregnant, you have about 34 weeks left. Use a due date calculator for an exact estimate.

The estimated due date is usually 280 days (40 weeks) from the first day of your last menstrual period.

Conception in April usually means a due date around January, depending on your cycle and ovulation date.

  • May → February
  • June → March
    Exact timing varies based on your LMP and ultrasound dating.

At 10 weeks pregnant, you have approximately 30 weeks remaining until delivery.

At 4 weeks, you have about 36 weeks left. Early pregnancy dates are estimates and may change after ultrasound.

At 7 weeks pregnant, your estimated due date is about 33 weeks from now.

Your due date is calculated using your last menstrual period (LMP) or conception date.

Due date calculators provide estimates. A first-trimester ultrasound is the most accurate way to confirm your due date.

Yes, you can estimate your pregnancy weeks using your last period date, ovulation date, or due date with an online pregnancy calculator. However, an early ultrasound gives the most reliable measurement, especially if your cycle is irregular.

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