Prenatal Development

  • Week 1

    You are not pregnant yet but your body is getting ready to birth.
  • Period: to

    First Trimester

  • Week 2

    You don't feel any different but during this time the sperm is making its way to an egg, if you notice light spotting it means that the fertilized egg has attached to the wall of the uterus
  • Week 3

    You are officially pregnant, the sperm and the egg have merged into a single cell called the zygote and the chromosomes are merging.
  • Week 4

    Now that the embryo has attached to the wall of your uterus, the real work begins. Cells are dividing that will create all of your baby's organs. A fluid-filled cushion called the amniotic sac is forming.
  • Week 5

    At this stage, they look like a tiny collection of tubes. But those tubes have important purposes! One tube is forming a brain and spinal cord. Another is developing into baby's heart. Tiny buds on either side of the body will grow into arms and legs. As your baby keeps growing, you might feel the first twinges of pregnancy symptoms, such as sore breasts, morning sickness, and the constant urge to urinate.
  • Week 6

    Baby still looks like a tadpole but that won't last for long. Human features are starting to emerge, including two eyes that come complete with lids. The lungs and digestive system are also starting to branch out, forming the organs that will help your baby breathe and eat in just a few months.
  • Week 7

    Even though you're only in your second month, your baby's body is already forming every organ it will need — including the heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, and intestines. Buds are sprouting from baby's growing arms. Right now they look like paddles, but eventually they'll form hands and feet. Your baby is attached to you by an umbilical cord. Through this connection, you'll provide food, and filter away your baby's wastes until you deliver.
  • Week 8

    You might not look pregnant yet, but you probably feel it! If the morning sickness hasn't set in, you're at least feeling more tired than usual. Inside your uterus, your baby is developing at a rapid pace.
  • Week 9

    The tadpole-like tail is almost gone, and in its place are two little legs. Your baby's head is still huge compared to the body, but it will get more proportional in the weeks to come. Inside, the reproductive organs are forming — although it's still too early to tell on an ultrasound whether you're having a boy or girl. If you look closely, though, you might see your baby move!
  • Week 10

    the tail is gone, that early appendage is now completely gone. Also gone is the webbing between baby's fingers and toes. Your baby now has a real profile with well-defined eyes, mouth, and ears. Baby's eyes are wide open now, but soon the eyelids will close — at least temporarily. Inside baby's brain, the connections are forming.
  • Week 11

    Your baby has become very active, though you probably can't feel any flutters just yet. Baby still only measures just 2 inches long from the top of the head to the rump — about the size of a prune. Most of that is the head, which makes up about half of your baby's entire body! In a few weeks, baby's head and body will become more proportional. Also happening this week — your baby is growing fingernails and irises — the part of the eye that controls how much light enters.
  • Week 12

    You've reached the end of your first trimester — a major milestone! By the end of this week, your risk of having a miscarriage drops significantly. By now you've put on 2 to 5 pounds, and your baby looks like a fully formed person. Inside, more organs are developing. Baby's kidneys are getting ready to produce urine. Your little one also has teeth, as well as fingers and toes — complete with nails.
  • Week 13

    Hopefully you're over any morning sickness you had. Now, you should be putting on weight. Now the head makes up only 1/3 of your baby's body. Helping your baby grow is the placenta, which is serving up a steady supply of nutrients and disposing of wastes. If you're having a girl, their ovaries are already filled with hundreds to thousands of eggs.
  • Week 14

    Your baby is right around 4 inches long from the top of the head to the rump and weighs about 4 1/2 ounces. Like a peach, their body is covered with soft hairs. These are called lanugo, and they're like a little coat providing warmth in the womb. Don't worry — this fine covering of fur should be gone by your due date. Baby is also becoming an individual! |They are developing fingerprints, including on the thumb, which might have already found its way into baby's mouth.
  • Period: to

    Second Trimester

  • Week 15

    It's very clear what's going on right now inside your baby's body. Baby's skin is so thin you can see right through it! Look closely, and you'll be able to see a network of fine blood vessels forming. Baby's muscles are getting stronger, and they are testing them out by moving around, making fists, and trying out different facial expressions. At one of your next visits, your doctor should offer you a quad screening test to check for Down syndrome and other chromosome problems.
  • Week 16

    By now, your baby is nearly 5 inches long from the top of the head to the rump and weighs close to 4 ounces — about the size of a small apple. And you're probably enjoying a "pregnancy glow" right now. If your cheeks look flushed and healthy, it's because your blood volume has increased to supply your growing baby! There are also some downsides to this extra blood flow, including nosebleeds and bigger leg veins. Ask your doctor for tips to deal with these issues.
  • Week 17

    The lungs are breathing in amniotic fluid. Blood is pumping around the circulatory system. The kidneys are filtering urine. Your baby's looks are changing, as hair, eyebrows, and eyelashes grow in. Your body is changing, too. You might have trouble buttoning your blouse now, because your breasts have grown in preparation to feed your baby. Some women get a full cup size bigger.
  • Week 18

    Their ears are developed enough to hear you! In the next week or two, you'll get to see what baby looks like during your first pregnancy ultrasound. You can also learn whether you're having a boy or girl
  • Week 19

    The amniotic fluid that surrounds and protects your baby can also irritate their delicate skin. That's why baby's body is now coated with a waxy, white substance called vernix caseosa. It should be gone before birth, unless your baby is born early. Under the skin, a layer of fat is forming to provide warmth. As baby's hair grows in, you might notice your own hair getting thicker. This is because your normal hair shedding cycle has slowed down.
  • Week 20

    You're halfway through your pregnancy! In about 20 weeks, you'll get to meet your baby for the very first time. Inside you, baby can hear and may respond to sounds. Talk or sing so your baby can get familiar with your voice. By now, baby measures 6 1/2 inches from the top of the head to the rump and weighs about 11 ounces. Your baby will keep growing, and so will you. Expect to gain about 1/2 pound a week from here on out.
  • Week 21

    A lot is going on under the surface of your tummy! Tiny tooth buds are popping up in baby's gums. The intestines are starting to produce meconium, the sticky, tarry-looking waste that you'll see in baby's first few dirty diapers. Rapid eye movements may occur. And the bone marrow is ramping up its production of red blood cells, which will soon deliver oxygen to baby's body. Friends and co-workers should already be commenting on your growing belly, and congratulating you on your upcoming arrival!
  • Week 22

    This week your baby is almost 1 pound and 8 inches long from the top of the head to the rump! All sorts of systems are forming inside your baby, including hormones that will give their organs the commands they need to operate, and the nerves baby needs to touch, smell, and experience all sorts of other sensations. Baby's sex organs are also developing now. In boys, the testes have started to descend. In girls, the uterus, ovaries, and vagina are where they should be.
  • Week 23

    Your baby has passed the 1-pound mark and is almost developed enough to survive outside the womb, but you've still got a few more months to go. Now it's time for baby to practice for life out in the world. The lungs continue to get ready to breathe by inhaling amniotic fluid. They're also producing a substance called surfactant, which will allow the lungs to inflate. Baby's brain is making the connections needed to think,
  • Week 24

    Your baby now weighs more than a pound and extends almost a foot long from the top of the head to the rump.Your baby has now reached viability – meaning that the baby would most likely survive with the help of a ventilator if delivery had to take place. Fingernails are present. Between now and week 28, your doctor should give you a glucose screening test to check for gestational diabetes.
  • Week 25

    Your baby is getting bigger — weighing in at a pound-and-a-half — about the size of a head of broccoli. The window into the amazing world inside your baby is closing, as their skin goes from see-through to cloudy. Yet baby's heartbeat is becoming clearer. If your partner puts an ear against your belly, a faint and fast bah-boom, bah-boom may be strong enough to hear. You might also feel a gentle hiccup or two emanating from your belly.
  • Week 26

    Your baby is a 2-pound bundle of joy. They weigh about the same as the quart of milk you drink from daily to get your recommended 1,200 mg of calcium. For the first time since your baby's eyelids formed, they've opened, revealing bluish-colored eyes. Don't get too attached to the color — it might change in the first few months of life. There isn't much to see inside your uterus, but if you shine a light on your abdomen, your baby might react with a flurry of movement.
  • Week 27

    You've entered your third trimester — the home stretch! Your baby is starting to look like they will at delivery, but inside, the organs still have some maturing to do. That includes the brain, which is quickly making the connections needed to control baby's body. By now baby has settled into a regular schedule, alternating between periods of sleep and wakefulness. Unfortunately, baby's schedule might not be the same as yours. Don't be surprised if a few kicks jolt you awake at night.
  • Period: to

    Third Trimester

  • Week 28

    By now your baby measures about 10 inches long from the top of the head to the rump and weighs more than 2 pounds. They can do all sorts of things — blink, cough, hiccup, and possibly even dream! Baby is moving into position for childbirth, which is getting closer every day. If they are facing rump first, don't panic. There's still time to move into a headfirst position.
  • Week 29

    Baby is growing at a rapid rate, and because there's less room in the womb, you should be able to feel just about every movement. Some of those elbow and knee jabs will be pretty intense as baby's bones and muscles get stronger. Every other part of baby's body is maturing too, from lungs to brain. That brain is developing more wrinkles as nerve cell connections are established. Baby's senses are also becoming more aware of sound, light, and touch.
  • Week 30

    This week your baby measures about 11 inches long from the top of the head to the rump, and tips the scales at nearly 3 pounds — about the size of a small roasting chicken. As your baby grows, your belly is growing to match. That can be uncomfortable, and awkward, as your center of balance shifts. You might notice your feet expanding too, as your joints loosen up in preparation for labor. If that's the case, a shopping trip for a bigger pair of shoes may be in order.
  • Week 31

    You're putting on about a pound a week, and your baby is plumping up too. To get your body ready for labor, you may be starting to have Braxton Hicks contractions. These "practice" contractions can last from 30 seconds to 2 minutes. If contractions get more intense or closer together, call your doctor to make sure you're not in labor for real. Baby's lungs are still developing, and they would need the help of a ventilator to breathe if you gave birth right now.
  • Week 32

    Your baby, at almost 4 pounds, is like a cantaloupe weighing down your belly! There isn't much room left in your uterus, but somehow your little bundle will still manage to wriggle and squirm around in there, though maybe not as forcefully as before. Your baby is making final preparations for their appearance. The fine covering of body hair called lanugo is falling off, and hair only remains where it's meant to be — on the eyelashes, eyebrows, and head.
  • Week 33

    This week your baby's body continues to plump up, while the bones underneath harden to support it. The only bones that will stay soft are inside your baby's skull, which will need to compress slightly to fit through the birth canal. There will still be soft spots in your baby's skull throughout the first few years, to allow the brain to grow. Meanwhile, your growing girth is making you more uncomfortable, with afflictions ranging from heartburn to hemorrhoids.
  • Week 34

    Right now your baby measures more than 12 inches from the top of the head to the rump, and weighs 5 pounds — about the size of a large pineapple. Most of the major organs — digestive, respiratory, and nervous systems — are almost able to work on their own. Your baby may already be in the head-down position, ready for delivery! Space in your uterus is tight these days, so don't be surprised if you see an errant elbow or knee poking out from your belly.
  • Week 35

    There may not be much room left in your uterus, with your baby weighing in at nearly 5 1/2 pounds, but now the serious growth begins. For the next few weeks, your baby will put on 1/2 pound or more a week. Baby is also settling into position lower in your pelvis for delivery – this movement is called "lightening." breathing should get easier now — but bad news for your bladder, which will start to feel more pressure. As a result, you'll be spending even more time in the bathroom.
  • Week 36

    In just a few days, your baby will be considered full-term. At almost 6 pounds — about the size of a honeydew melon — your child's body is just about ready for birth. The waxy, white substance called vernix caseosa that covered much of their body during this 9-month journey has dissolved. Baby has swallowed this and other substances, which will form the blackish-green meconium bowel movements you'll find in baby's first diapers.
  • Week 37

    Your pregnancy is now full-term, and your baby is just about full-sized. At a weight of 6 1/2 pounds, it's like you're carrying around a small bowling ball! Baby is getting ready for labor, which could be a couple of weeks away — or any day now! Their head is moving into position in your pelvis, which is called "engaged." Baby's immune system is also arming up, and will keep developing after birth. If you breastfeed, you'll boost baby's immune system even more.
  • Week 38

    You're in the home stretch! Baby now weighs more than 6 1/2 pounds. Much of that weight is a layer of fat, which will help keep them warm in the outside world. Your baby's growth has slowed down, but the organs should all be working now. The brain has started to control the functions of the entire body — from breathing to regulating the heart rate. Reflexes are also active — including the grasping and sucking that allow baby to grab your hand and latch on to a breast soon after birth.
  • Week 39

    At just over 7 pounds, your baby is like a little watermelon in your belly — and you can feel every ounce. You're probably more than ready to be done with the heartburn, backaches, and constant bathroom visits and ready to meet your baby already! You won't have to wait much longer. Baby could be born any day now. You may notice more Braxton Hicks contractions as your body prepares for labor. If they get more regular and intense, it's time to call the doctor.
  • Week 40

    This is the week when you should finally get to meet your little bundle you've been carrying around for the last 9 months! However, often babies don't cooperate and arrive on schedule. If yours decides to stick around in your womb past your due date, talk to your doctor about whether they will cause you to go into labor, also known as inducing. Although newborn sizes can vary, the average baby weighs 7 pounds, and measures 20 inches long from the top of the head to the rump.