Ovulation is the time of the month when you release an egg from one of your ovaries. In order to get pregnant, you need to ovulate, but how do you know when ovulation occurs? Whether you choose to chart your signs of fertility via basal body temperature and cervical mucus, use ovulation test strips, check your cervix regularly, or rely on calendar tracking to calculate your fertile window, you can figure out when you’re ovulating – and increase your chances of getting pregnant.
Ovulation is when you release an egg from one of your ovaries. From the five days before ovulation through to the day that you ovulate, you're potentially fertile. But your chances of getting pregnant are highest if you have sex in the last three days of this six-day window.
If you don't ovulate, it's not possible to become pregnant, since there won't be an egg available for fertilization. A menstrual cycle that occurs without the release of an egg is called an anovulatory cycle.
How do I know when I'm ovulating?
Typically, there are three major signs that indicate you are ovulating; by keeping track of these symptoms, you can begin to predict ovulation.
Changes in basal body temperature (BBT)
Your BBT is your lowest body temperature in a 24-hour period. On the day after you ovulate, your BBT will go up by 0.5 to 1.0 degrees Fahrenheit and stay elevated until your next period.
Changes in cervical mucus
Cervical mucus is the vaginal discharge you sometimes find in your underwear. During the few days before you ovulate and immediately after ovulation, you may notice an increase in cervical mucus and a change in its texture.
Changes to the cervix
During ovulation, your cervix is softer, higher, wetter, and more open. You may not know exactly how this feels unless you check your cervix regularly and learn what it's like when your cervix is soft and open versus hard and closed. You may want to try regularly checking your cervix throughout your cycle so you have a baseline.
Does ovulation cause pain or bleeding?
Ovulation can cause mild discomfort in the form of light cramps or twinges in the abdomen, or a one-sided backache. This is known as mittelschmerz (German for "middle pain"). Some women don't notice any ovulation cramping at all, and those that do usually don't find that it interferes with their daily activity. Ovulation discomfort usually only lasts a day or two.
You might also see light spotting or bleeding, or mild discharge, around the time you release an egg. Again, not all women will have this symptom and it is typically not severe.
There are also several other symptoms of ovulation that are not as common or consistent as cervical and temperature changes, so you may have all, some, or none of them. They may include:
Breast tenderness
Heightened sense of smell
Increased sex drive (some women say they feel sexy, flirty, more sociable, and more physically attractive)
Changes in appetite or mood
Fluid retention
When do I ovulate?
Generally, you ovulate in the middle of your menstrual cycle. If you have an average 28-day cycle, you may ovulate around day 14. However, lengths of normal cycles can vary from 21 to 35 days. Some women ovulate around the same day each cycle, but for others the timing is hard to pinpoint.
There's no foolproof method to predict when you'll ovulate. But here are a few ways you can estimate when it's most likely to happen, so you can try to time sex or intrauterine insemination (IUI) accordingly and boost your chances of getting pregnant.
(If that egg gets fertilized by a sperm and implants in your uterus, you're pregnant!)
Use an ovulation test kit
Testing your hormone levels with an ovulation predictor kit (OPK) is a more dependable way to identify your fertile window, though it doesn't work perfectly for all women.
There are two kinds of kits:
Urine tests: This is the most common. The pee-on-a-stick test indicates when your level of luteinizing hormone (LH) has gone up, which usually means one of your ovaries will soon release an egg. Some tests measure the level of another hormone, estrone-3-glucuronide (E3G), that also goes up around the time of ovulation.
Saliva tests: With the saliva test, you use a microscope to spot a pattern in your dried saliva that indicates the rise in estrogen that happens in the days before ovulation.
Both types of tests show a positive result in the days before you ovulate, giving you time to plan ahead for baby-making sex.
The kits are available at drugstores or online without a prescription. They can cost between $10 and $50 each.
Use an ovulation calculator
You can use BabyCenter's Ovulation Calculator to find out which days you're likely to be fertile according to the calendar method and what your due date will be if you conceive. It's one quick and easy way to figure out how to increase your chances of getting pregnant.
Try the calendar method
If your cycle is regular – the same number of days each time – you can try the calendar method (also known as the Standard Days Method).
To estimate when you'll ovulate:
Find your expected ovulation day: To do this, count back 14 days from when you expect your next period.
Calculate your fertile window: This includes the day you ovulate and the preceding five days. So, for example, if day 1 is the first day of your period and day 28 is the day before you expect your next period, you'd be fertile on days 9 through 14.
Emphasize the last three days: You're much more likely to get pregnant during the final three days of your fertile window than during the days immediately after you ovulate. This is because your egg survives in your fallopian tube for 24 hours after ovulation. And although sperm can survive in a woman's body for up to five days, they're more likely to fertilize your egg within three days of having sex.
This method is the easiest way to estimate your fertile window, but it's not very accurate, even if you have a good idea of when your next period will start. That's because ovulation rarely happens exactly 14 days before menstruation.
In one large study of women with 28-day cycles, the day of ovulation varied from seven to 19 days before menstruation. Ovulation happened 14 days before a period only 10 percent of the time.
So you can see how it's possible to miss your fertile window altogether using this method. On the other hand, it's simple, free, and worth a try, especially if you're not in a hurry to conceive.
Monitor your ovulation symptoms
You can track subtle changes in your basal body temperature, cervical mucus, and cervical firmness for a few cycles to try to determine when you ovulate.
If you pay attention to these clues and note them on a chart or app, you may see a pattern that can help you predict when you're likely to ovulate next. (If your periods are irregular, however, you may not notice a pattern.)
Charting is free (after you buy the thermometer), but this method takes time and effort to do accurately.
Here's how you track each symptom:
Basal body temperature: You use a special basal thermometer (that you can buy online or at a drugstore) to measure your BBT every day, right when you wake up and after you've had at least three hours of uninterrupted sleep. After ovulation, your BBT will rise 0.5 to 1.0 degree Fahrenheit and stay that way until you get your period. The change in temperature doesn't tell you when you're going to ovulate, only that you have ovulated, so it's important to use this method in tandem with observing the changes in cervical mucus throughout your cycle.
Cervical mucus: For most of the month, you may have very little cervical mucus, or it may be thick and sticky. But in the few days before, during, and immediately after ovulation, you'll notice an increase in cervical mucus and a change in its texture: It will turn clear, slippery, and stretchy (like raw egg whites). This is the time, just before ovulation, when intercourse is most likely to lead to conception.
Cervix changes: As you approach ovulation, your cervix will become soft, high, open, and wet – you can remember this with the acronym SHOW. After ovulation, these signs reverse and the cervix becomes firm, low, closed, and dry. You can feel these changes if you reach inside your vagina with a clean, just-washed finger. Read on for more in-depth information on checking your cervix.
It can also help to be aware of other ovulation symptoms you might have, such as spotting or cramping. Although this isn't a precise way to determine when you're ovulating, it may be helpful to be aware of these symptoms (if you have them) while using the calendar, OPK, or charting methods.
Check your cervix
If your other fertility signs are obvious – you produce fertile-quality cervical mucus leading up to ovulation and have a sustained temperature shift following the buildup of cervical mucus that confirms ovulation – you shouldn't need to check your cervix. But if there's any ambiguity, your cervix offers good information to back up the other two signs.
Many women aren't familiar with touching their cervix. And when they do, they may not know exactly how it should feel. (How soft is "soft," for example?)
Here's what you need to know about checking your cervix:
Check when your mucus changes consistency: The best way to learn about your cervix is to start checking it once your cervical mucus changes consistency and to continue checking for a few days after your temperature has risen. That phase of about five days is when you'll notice the most abrupt change.
Insert finger to middle knuckle: To check your cervix, insert your clean middle finger into your vagina up to at least your middle knuckle or even farther. Notice how the cervix feels to the touch. Just before ovulation it may feel like your lips. After ovulation it will feel harder, like the tip of your nose.
What to know about ovulation and pregnancy
You need an egg to become fertilized if you want to get pregnant, so ovulation is a necessary step – you actually can't get pregnant without ovulating, because then there would be no egg to be fertilized. While it's possible to hit the fertilization lottery and get pregnant without paying any attention to when you're ovulating, your chances of conceiving will be higher (and getting pregnant may happen faster) if you can learn how to monitor your ovulation symptoms and calculate your fertile window.
BabyCenter's editorial team is committed to providing the most helpful and trustworthy pregnancy and parenting information in the world. When creating and updating content, we rely on credible sources: respected health organizations, professional groups of doctors and other experts, and published studies in peer-reviewed journals. We believe you should always know the source of the information you're seeing. Learn more about our editorial and medical review policies.
ACOG. 2019. Fertility awareness-based methods of family planning. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. https://www.acog.org/womens-health/faqs/fertility-awareness-based-methods-of-family-planning [Accessed August 2022]
ACOG. 2020. Good health before pregnancy: Prepregnancy care. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. https://www.acog.org/womens-health/faqs/good-health-before-pregnancy-prepregnancy-care [Accessed August 2022]
ASRM. 2017. Optimizing natural fertility: A committee opinion. American Society for Reproductive Medicine. https://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015-0282(16)62849-2/fulltext [Accessed August 2022]
Sarah Bradley is a freelance health and parenting writer from Connecticut, where she lives with a lot of boys (a husband, three sons, and a golden retriever). When she isn't writing, Bradley is usually homeschooling, binge-watching TV shows, and taking care of her many houseplants. She might also be baking a cake.