First Trimester: The Complete Guide

First Trimester: The Complete Guide

First trimester pregnancy guide covering weeks 1-13 — what to expect, common symptoms, prenatal care, and what's actually happening.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider with questions about your pregnancy.

TL;DR

What's Happening With Your Baby

The first trimester is when the most dramatic development happens. By the end of week 13, all of your baby's major organs and systems have formed.

Weeks 1-4: The Beginning

Weeks 1 and 2 are counted from the first day of your last period — you're not technically pregnant yet. Conception typically happens around week 2. By week 4, the fertilized egg has implanted in your uterus and is the size of a poppy seed. This is usually around the time you'd miss your period.

Weeks 5-8: Major Development

Your baby's heart starts beating around week 5-6. By week 8, all major organs have begun forming. The neural tube (which becomes the brain and spinal cord) closes. Tiny arms and legs appear. Your baby is about the size of a raspberry.

Weeks 9-13: Looking Human

Fingers and toes separate. Bones start to harden. Your baby starts moving (though you won't feel it yet). By week 13, your baby is about 3 inches long — the size of a lemon — and has a fully formed face.

What You Might Feel

Exhaustion

The kind of tired that no amount of sleep fixes. Your body is building an entire placenta and circulating 50% more blood volume. First trimester fatigue is real and it's intense. If you can nap, nap. This typically improves in the second trimester.

Nausea (Morning Sickness)

Affects up to 80% of pregnant people and can happen any time of day despite the name. It usually starts around week 6 and improves by weeks 12-14. See our morning sickness remedies guide for what actually helps.

Sore Breasts

Often one of the first symptoms people notice, sometimes before a missed period. Your breasts may feel heavy, tender, or swollen. This is caused by rising hormone levels and increased blood flow.

Frequent Urination

Your growing uterus presses on your bladder, and increased blood flow means your kidneys are filtering more fluid. Yes, you'll be peeing a lot. It eases in the second trimester (then comes back in the third).

Mood Swings

Hormones, exhaustion, and the emotional weight of pregnancy news can make your emotions feel like a rollercoaster. This is normal. Crying during a commercial is a rite of passage.

Cramping

Mild cramping is normal in early pregnancy and is usually caused by your uterus stretching. See our guide to early pregnancy cramping to know what's normal and when to call your provider.

Food Aversions and Cravings

Foods you loved may suddenly repulse you. You might crave strange combinations. Both are hormone-driven and completely normal.

Prenatal Care

Your First Appointment

Most providers schedule your first prenatal visit between weeks 8-10. Expect:

See our first prenatal appointment guide for a detailed rundown.

Prenatal Vitamins

Start taking a prenatal vitamin with folic acid as soon as you know you're pregnant (ideally before). Folic acid is critical for neural tube development in the first trimester. Your provider can recommend a specific brand if needed.

Screening Tests

Your provider may offer first-trimester screening tests, including:

These are optional. Your provider will explain what's available and help you decide what's right for you.

Track Every Milestone

Get personalized weekly updates, appointment reminders, and weekly insights delivered to your fingertips.

Join 2,000+ expecting parents on the waitlist

Common First Trimester Worries

Miscarriage

About 10-15% of known pregnancies end in miscarriage, and the vast majority happen in the first trimester. After you see a heartbeat on ultrasound (usually around week 6-8), the risk drops significantly. This fear is incredibly common and completely understandable. See our guide on coping with miscarriage fears.

"Is This Normal?"

Nearly every symptom feels alarming when you're newly pregnant. In general, mild cramping, light spotting, fatigue, nausea, and breast tenderness are all normal first trimester experiences. Call your provider if you experience heavy bleeding, severe pain, or fever.

When to Tell People

There's no right time. Many people wait until after the first trimester when the risk of miscarriage decreases. Others tell close friends and family right away for emotional support. Some tell their employer early if they need accommodations. Do what feels right for your situation.

What to Avoid

The Bottom Line

The first trimester is physically demanding and emotionally intense. You're building a human from scratch, and your body is doing extraordinary work even if you can't see it yet. Be gentle with yourself, lean on your support system, and remember: the exhaustion and nausea are temporary, even when they don't feel like it.

Sources

Found this helpful?

Share it with someone who might need it too.