The quick answer
Around 13,000 people search "how many weeks pregnant am I" or "how many weeks am I pregnant" every single month. It's the foundational question that drives nearly every other part of your journey, from tracking fetal development milestones and identifying normal symptoms to scheduling OB/GYN appointments and counting down the days. The fastest way to find out: subtract the date of your last menstrual period from today, then divide by 7. That's your week. The slower way: try to remember the math while your nausea kicks in.
There's a third way that takes 10 seconds.
Already suspecting you might be pregnant? The August AI Pregnancy Calculator instantly shows your current pregnancy week, trimester, and estimated due date based on your LMP, conception date, ultrasound dating, or IVF transfer date.
How pregnancy weeks are counted
Understanding how pregnancy weeks are counted can feel counterintuitive at first. In the medical community worldwide, a standard LMP pregnancy calculation dates your pregnancy from the very first day of your last menstrual period, not from the actual day of conception.
Why this can feel strange: you typically conceive about 2 weeks after the start of your last period. So when your doctor says you're "6 weeks pregnant," your baby is biologically about 4 weeks old. Your pregnancy is dated as 6 weeks because the count begins 2 weeks earlier.
Why doctors count this way: most people can remember the first day of their last period accurately. Conception date is harder to pinpoint, even with ovulation tracking. The LMP method gives a consistent starting point.
A full pregnancy is 40 weeks from LMP, or about 38 weeks from actual conception.
For deeper detail on LMP-based dating, see Planned Parenthood and Roswell OBGYN.
How to calculate weeks pregnant manually
If you want to calculate pregnancy weeks by hand to understand the clinical logic, follow this straightforward manual method:
- Note the exact first day of your last menstrual period (LMP).
- Count the total number of calendar days that have passed from that start date up until today.
- Divide that total number of days by 7. For example, 60 days since your LMP equals roughly 8.5 weeks pregnant.
- Add 280 days to your LMP for your estimated due date. Or use the Naegele's Rule shortcut: subtract 3 months from your LMP, add 7 days, then add 1 year. Example: an LMP of March 15 becomes a due date of December 22.
For the full detailed manual calculation method, see Mama Natural and Roswell OBGYN.
The easier way: use a pregnancy calculator
While calculating your weeks manually is a great way to understand the underlying logic, a dedicated digital pregnancy calculator is vastly faster and automatically adjusts for complex calendar variations.
A good pregnancy calculator should:
- Accept multiple input methods (LMP, conception date, ultrasound dating, IVF transfer)
- Show your current pregnancy week down to the day
- Display your estimated due date
- Identify your trimester
- Project where you'll be on future dates
The August AI Pregnancy Calculator does all of the above. It also functions as a due date calculator, IVF pregnancy calculator, and conception-based pregnancy calculator depending on which input you choose.
Try the August AI Pregnancy Calculator. It's free and provides instant results.
When the calculation gets adjusted
While an LMP baseline is the clinical default, your doctor may set an adjusted due date based on specific medical realities:
- Ultrasound dating. If a first-trimester scan reveals fetal measurements that vary from your LMP math by more than 5 to 7 days, your clinician will officially update your pregnancy timeline.
- IVF pregnancy week calculation. Since the conception window is precisely tracked, dating drops the calendar guesswork and calculates your active weeks from your exact embryo transfer date and embryonic age.
- Irregular cycles. Fluctuating ovulation windows make traditional calendar tracking unreliable, so early ultrasound metrics are used to anchor your timeline.
Always defer to your provider's adjusted date over initial home tracking.
What's next: quick trimester map
Pinpointing your exact week answers the next burning question: what trimester am I in? Use this quick trimester map to navigate the milestones ahead:
First trimester (weeks 1 to 12). Crucial structural foundations form. This initial window carries the highest miscarriage risk alongside the strongest early hormonal symptoms. If that risk is on your mind, our guide on understanding miscarriage risk may help.
Second trimester (weeks 13 to 26). The honeymoon phase. Nausea usually clears, energy rebounds, a baby bump emerges, and you'll complete your week 20 anatomy ultrasound.
Third trimester (weeks 27 to 40). The rapid-growth home stretch, where prenatal checkups double in frequency as you approach your week 40 due date.
For the complete week-by-week breakdown of every stage, see pregnancy week by week: the complete guide to all 40 weeks.
