Trimester by Trimester
Early Signs of Pregnancy: A Week-by-Week Symptom Timeline
From implantation spotting in week 3 to the lifting of nausea near week 13, here is exactly when each early pregnancy symptom appears — and the hormone driving it.
Clinically reviewed · June 2026
Early pregnancy symptoms begin as early as week 3 with possible implantation spotting, then layer in — missed period and breast tenderness by week 4, nausea peaking weeks 8–10, profound fatigue from week 4–6, and frequent urination from weeks 6–10 — all driven by rising hCG and progesterone.
One of the most disorienting things about early pregnancy is not knowing what to expect or when. A twinge of breast soreness at week 4 can feel identical to PMS; nausea that arrives at 6 p.m. can be dismissed as a long day at work. Understanding the biological timeline — which hormone triggers which symptom and in which week — can help you read your own body with more confidence.
This guide maps the most common early pregnancy symptoms to the week they typically appear, using the standard obstetric convention of counting from the first day of your last menstrual period (LMP). Where relevant, it notes the hormone driving each symptom and what the medical evidence says about intensity and duration.
General information only — this is not medical advice. Always discuss symptoms and concerns with your prenatal provider.
What happens in weeks 1–3 before most symptoms begin?
Weeks 1 and 2 of pregnancy, counted from your LMP, technically occur before fertilization. During these two weeks your body completes a menstrual cycle and prepares for ovulation. No pregnancy-specific symptoms exist yet because no pregnancy exists yet. The egg is fertilized at the end of week 2 or the beginning of week 3.
Week 3 — implantation and the first stirrings. After fertilization the resulting zygote travels down the fallopian tube over several days, dividing rapidly into a blastocyst. Implantation — the blastocyst embedding into the uterine lining — occurs approximately 6 to 12 days after fertilization, which places it within week 3 for most women. The moment implantation completes, the placenta begins forming and hCG production begins. hCG is the hormone detected by home pregnancy tests, but it takes several days after implantation to accumulate to detectable levels.
A minority of women notice implantation bleeding during week 3: light spotting, usually pink or light brown in color, lasting anywhere from a few hours to two days. It is lighter than a period and does not progress. Most women notice nothing at all during week 3.
What are the first noticeable pregnancy symptoms, and when exactly do they appear?
Week 4 — the missed period and breast changes. The hallmark that prompts most women to take a pregnancy test is a missed menstrual period, which falls in week 4. By this point hCG levels are high enough for a standard home urine test to detect. Accompanying week 4 symptoms often include:
- Breast soreness or swelling — consistently the most reliable early physical sign, sometimes appearing even before the missed period as estrogen and progesterone flood breast tissue. According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, breast changes increase rapidly in the first eight weeks, with areolas often darkening and enlarging.
- Mild fatigue and bloating — progesterone begins its sedating effect on the nervous system almost immediately after implantation.
- Light spotting — if implantation occurred on the later end of week 3, spotting may still be present in early week 4.
Weeks 4–9 — nausea arrives and escalates. Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP) typically begins between weeks 4 and 9 and peaks around weeks 8 to 10 as hCG reaches its highest concentration. Despite the name "morning sickness," nausea can occur at any hour and is frequently worst when blood sugar is low or when the body is fatigued. The Cleveland Clinic reports that NVP affects roughly 70–80% of pregnant women. For most, it resolves by weeks 12–14 as hCG levels plateau.
Weeks 4–6 — profound fatigue sets in. First-trimester fatigue is one of the most underestimated symptoms of early pregnancy. It is primarily driven by rapidly rising progesterone, which has a central nervous system sedating effect. Simultaneously, blood volume is expanding, the heart rate is increasing to supply the developing placenta, and blood sugar levels may be running lower than usual. The cumulative effect can feel like an inability to stay awake regardless of how much sleep you get. This fatigue typically begins in weeks 4–6 and remains intense through week 12 for most women.
Weeks 6–10 — frequent urination begins. Increased urinary frequency can start earlier than most women anticipate. Two mechanisms drive it: hCG stimulates increased kidney blood flow and filtration rate (producing more urine), and the expanding uterus begins pressing on the bladder — even before it is large enough to show. According to Mayo Clinic, this symptom tends to ease in the second trimester as the uterus rises out of the pelvis, then returns in the third trimester when the baby's head presses down again.
hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) — produced by the developing placenta immediately after implantation; drives nausea, breast changes, and fatigue, and is the marker detected by pregnancy tests. Progesterone — produced first by the corpus luteum, then the placenta; responsible for fatigue, bloating, constipation, and breast soreness throughout the first trimester.
How do early pregnancy symptoms change from weeks 10 to 13?
For many women, weeks 10 to 13 bring a gradual easing of the most uncomfortable symptoms as the first trimester draws to a close.
Nausea begins to lift. As hCG levels plateau after approximately week 10, nausea often begins to ease — though it does not disappear instantly for everyone. A subset of women experience NVP well into the second trimester, and a small fraction throughout the entire pregnancy. Hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) — affecting 0.3–2% of pregnancies — is defined by persistent vomiting, weight loss exceeding 5% of pre-pregnancy body weight, and ketonuria, and requires medical management including IV fluids and antiemetics.
Fatigue may slowly improve. As the placenta takes over hormone production (around weeks 10–12) and the body adjusts to its new demands, the most crushing fatigue often begins to lift. Energy levels are highly individual — some women feel dramatically better by week 12, others not until week 16 or beyond.
Breast changes and constipation continue. Breast growth, darkening of the areolas, and heightened sensitivity typically continue through the first trimester and beyond — they do not ease with hCG the way nausea does. Constipation driven by progesterone's slowing of intestinal smooth muscle is also common through week 13 and into the second trimester.
Week 13 — end of the first trimester. The first trimester officially ends at 13 weeks 6 days (per ACOG). By this point all major organ systems are formed; the risk of miscarriage drops substantially after week 12, since the most critical developmental processes are largely complete.
What can help with nausea and other first-trimester symptoms?
The good news is that several evidence-based options exist for managing first-trimester nausea. The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) recommends pyridoxine (vitamin B6) 10–25 mg three to four times daily as the preferred first-line OTC option, often combined with doxylamine (the tablet form of Unisom SleepTabs, 12.5 mg). This is the combination sold as the prescription medication Diclegis, which carries a Pregnancy Category A safety designation — the FDA's highest safety classification for pregnancy medications. ACOG and AAFP estimate this combination reduces NVP symptoms by up to 70%.
Ginger in capsule form — 250 mg four times daily, totaling 1,000–1,500 mg per day — has demonstrated efficacy superior to placebo in multiple randomized trials through the first trimester. Sea-Band Mama acupressure wristbands (which apply continuous pressure to the P6 acupressure point on the inner wrist) and Preggie Pop Drops (particularly the B6-fortified "Plus" version made by Three Lollies) are low-risk adjuncts worth trying alongside other measures.
For fatigue, rest is the primary prescription. Keeping blood sugar stable with small, frequent meals can help. For constipation, psyllium husk (Metamucil) and polyethylene glycol 3350 (Miralax) are considered safe OTC options per AAFP guidance — stay well hydrated alongside these agents. For pain or fever, acetaminophen (Tylenol) is the recommended first-line analgesic throughout pregnancy; NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) should be avoided.
Discuss any supplement or OTC medication with your prenatal provider before starting, particularly if you have any underlying health conditions or are taking other medications.
Frequently asked
What is the very first sign of pregnancy most women notice?
The most consistent and earliest noticeable sign is a missed menstrual period, which occurs around week 4 of pregnancy (counting from the first day of the last period). Breast soreness or swelling often accompanies it — and may actually appear a day or two before the missed period — as rising estrogen and progesterone rapidly alter breast tissue. Mild bloating, light spotting (implantation bleeding), and the beginning of fatigue can also emerge in this same window. According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, breast changes are among the most reliably early symptoms and can begin as early as one to two weeks after conception. A home pregnancy test taken on the first day of the missed period will reliably confirm hCG at this point. This is general information, not medical advice — talk to your provider about any concerns.
When does morning sickness typically start and peak?
Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP) most commonly begins between weeks 4 and 9 and peaks around weeks 8 to 10, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Despite its name, "morning sickness" can occur at any time of day — many women find it is worst when their blood sugar is low or when they are overtired. For most women it begins to ease between weeks 12 and 14 as hCG levels plateau. Roughly 70–80% of pregnant women experience some degree of nausea. A small subset — about 0.3–2% — develop hyperemesis gravidarum, a severe form defined by persistent vomiting, weight loss exceeding 5% of pre-pregnancy body weight, and ketonuria, which may require medical management. If nausea prevents you from keeping fluids down for more than 24 hours, contact your provider promptly.
What causes implantation bleeding and how long does it last?
Implantation bleeding occurs when the fertilized egg (blastocyst) burrows into the uterine lining, typically 6 to 12 days after fertilization — which places it around week 3 of pregnancy. The disruption of small surface blood vessels causes light spotting that is usually pink or brown, not the bright red of a menstrual flow, and it lasts anywhere from a few hours to 1–2 days. It is generally lighter than a period and does not progress to heavy bleeding. Not all women experience it — it is a minority symptom, not a universal one. Because implantation happens before or at the same time as a missed period, hCG levels may still be too low for a home test to detect. ACOG notes that spotting in early pregnancy is common and in most cases benign, but any bleeding should be reported to your provider to rule out other causes. This article does not substitute for medical care.
Why does pregnancy cause such extreme fatigue in the first trimester?
First-trimester fatigue is primarily driven by rapidly rising progesterone, which has a sedating effect on the central nervous system. At the same time, the body is dramatically increasing blood volume, the heart is working harder to supply the developing placenta, and blood sugar levels may run lower than usual — all of which compound the feeling of exhaustion. The Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic both describe first-trimester fatigue as one of the most intense symptoms of pregnancy, often beginning as early as weeks 4–6 and peaking through week 12. Rest when possible; prioritize sleep over productivity during this window. Iron stores also influence energy levels — if fatigue is especially severe, ask your provider to check a complete blood count and ferritin, as iron-deficiency anemia can develop as early as the first trimester. Talk to your provider if fatigue is accompanied by lightheadedness or shortness of breath.
When does frequent urination start in early pregnancy?
Increased urinary frequency can begin as early as weeks 6–10 — earlier than most people expect. Two mechanisms are at work: first, rising hCG stimulates increased kidney blood flow and filtration rate, producing more urine; second, the growing uterus begins exerting pressure on the bladder even before it is large enough to be visible or palpable. Mayo Clinic confirms that frequent urination is a recognized first-trimester symptom that tends to ease in the second trimester as the uterus rises out of the pelvis, then returns in the third trimester when fetal head engagement compresses the bladder again. Staying hydrated is still important — do not restrict fluids to manage frequency, as adequate hydration supports healthy blood volume expansion. If urination is painful or accompanied by urgency and fever, a urinary tract infection (common in pregnancy) should be ruled out.
Are there safe remedies for first-trimester nausea?
Yes — several options have solid evidence behind them. The American Academy of Family Physicians recommends pyridoxine (vitamin B6) 10–25 mg three to four times daily as the preferred first-line OTC option, often combined with doxylamine (the tablet form of Unisom SleepTabs, 12.5 mg). This combination — sold by prescription as Diclegis — is the only FDA-approved treatment for NVP with a Pregnancy Category A safety designation. Ginger in capsule form (250 mg four times daily, totaling 1,000–1,500 mg/day) has been shown superior to placebo in multiple randomized trials through the first trimester. Sea-Band Mama acupressure wristbands and Preggie Pop Drops (the B6-fortified version) are low-risk adjuncts. If nausea escalates to vomiting that prevents fluid retention, contact your provider — IV fluids and prescription antiemetics may be necessary. Discuss any supplement or medication with your provider before starting.