TL;DR
- Weeks 4-6: Missed period, fatigue, sore breasts, maybe nausea starting
- Weeks 7-12: Peak nausea, extreme fatigue, frequent urination, mood swings
- Weeks 13-20: Nausea fades, energy returns, round ligament pain, baby bump appears
- Weeks 21-40: Movement, heartburn, back pain, Braxton Hicks, swelling, insomnia — and then labor
Every pregnancy is different. You might experience all of these, none of these, or a completely different combination. All of that is normal.
First Trimester (Weeks 1-13)
Weeks 1-3: Before You Know
You probably won't notice anything yet. Conception happens around week 2, and implantation around week 3-4. Some people report light spotting (implantation bleeding) or mild cramping.
Weeks 4-5: The First Signs
- Missed period — The most common first clue
- Fatigue — An overwhelming, can't-keep-your-eyes-open tiredness
- Breast tenderness — Sore, heavy, or swollen
- Mild cramping — Similar to period cramps
- Bloating — Hormones slow digestion
- Mood changes — You might feel more emotional than usual
Weeks 6-8: Nausea Arrives
- Morning sickness — Despite the name, it can happen all day. Peaks around weeks 8-10.
- Food aversions — Things you loved now make you gag
- Heightened sense of smell — Everything smells stronger (and worse)
- Frequent urination — Your uterus is pressing on your bladder
- Increased fatigue — Still intense
Weeks 9-11: Peak First Trimester
- Nausea may peak — This is often the worst stretch, but it means hormones are doing their job
- Acne — Hormones can trigger breakouts
- Constipation — Progesterone slows your digestive system
- Visible veins — Increased blood volume makes veins more prominent
Weeks 12-13: Turning the Corner
- Nausea starts to fade for many people
- Energy may begin returning
- Your waistband gets tight — Not quite a bump yet, but things don't fit the same
- Reduced urination frequency — Temporarily, as the uterus rises out of the pelvis
Second Trimester (Weeks 14-27)
Weeks 14-16: The Relief
- Energy rebounds — Many people feel the best they will all pregnancy
- Appetite returns — After weeks of nausea, food sounds good again
- Less breast tenderness — Still larger, but less sore
- Nasal congestion — Pregnancy rhinitis from increased blood flow
- Occasional headaches
Weeks 17-20: Movement and Growth
- Quickening — You might feel baby move for the first time. First-time parents often feel it around weeks 18-22. It feels like flutters, bubbles, or popcorn.
- Round ligament pain — Sharp pains in your lower belly as things stretch
- Visible baby bump — Other people might start noticing
- Skin changes — Linea nigra, darkening nipples, possible melasma
- Increased appetite — You're growing a baby and a placenta
Weeks 21-24: The Middle
- Stronger fetal movement — Kicks you can actually see from outside
- Braxton Hicks contractions — Mild, irregular tightening of the uterus
- Leg cramps — Especially at night
- Swelling — Mild swelling in feet and ankles begins
- Back pain — Your center of gravity shifts forward
- Heartburn — May start as the uterus pushes the stomach upward
Weeks 25-27: Heading Into the Third Trimester
- Difficulty sleeping — Finding a comfortable position gets harder
- Shortness of breath — Baby is crowding your diaphragm
- Hemorrhoids — Increased blood volume and pressure. Common and manageable.
- Itchy skin — Your belly skin is stretching
- Carpal tunnel symptoms — Fluid retention can compress wrist nerves
Third Trimester (Weeks 28-40)
Weeks 28-31: The Home Stretch Begins
- Braxton Hicks increase — More frequent practice contractions
- Heartburn intensifies — Smaller meals help
- Fatigue returns — Not like the first trimester, but carrying 20+ extra pounds is tiring
- Vivid dreams — Common and often strange
- Leaky breasts — Colostrum (early milk) may start leaking
Weeks 32-35: Getting Bigger
- Pelvic pressure — Baby is getting heavy
- Shortness of breath — Your lungs are running out of room
- Frequent urination returns — Baby is sitting on your bladder again
- Difficulty sleeping — Between bathroom trips, heartburn, and discomfort
- Lightning crotch — Sharp, shooting pain in the pelvis from nerve pressure. It's as fun as it sounds.
- Clumsiness — Your center of gravity is different and your joints are looser
Weeks 36-38: Almost There
- Baby drops (lightening) — Breathing gets easier, but pelvic pressure increases
- Nesting instinct — Sudden energy to clean and organize everything
- Increased vaginal discharge — Normal as your body prepares for labor
- Losing mucus plug — Can happen days or weeks before labor
- More intense Braxton Hicks — Practicing for the real thing
Weeks 39-40: Due Date Zone
- Everything from above, intensified
- Loose stools — Your body may clear things out before labor
- Lower back pain — Persistent, dull ache
- Restlessness and impatience — Totally justified
- Possible signs of early labor — See our signs of labor guide
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Symptoms That Need Attention
Most symptoms are normal discomforts, but contact your provider if you experience:
- Heavy vaginal bleeding
- Severe abdominal pain
- Sudden severe headache
- Vision changes (blurring, spots)
- Sudden swelling in face or hands
- Fever over 100.4F
- Decrease in baby's movement
- Fluid gushing or leaking from vagina
- Contractions before 37 weeks that are regular and increasing
The Bottom Line
Pregnancy symptoms are as varied as the people experiencing them. This guide gives you a general roadmap, but your journey will be uniquely yours. When in doubt about whether something is normal, call your provider — that's what they're there for.
Sources
Related Articles
- First Trimester: The Complete Guide
- Second Trimester: The Complete Guide
- Third Trimester: The Complete Guide