# Quickening: When You'll Feel Baby Move and How to Count Kicks

> The first flutter is unforgettable — but timing varies widely. Here is what to expect from first movement through the third trimester, including the count-to-10 method and what your placenta position has to do with it.

*Published 2026-06-25 · By Maya Ellison, CNM*

The short answer
Quickening — the first perception of fetal movement — typically occurs between 14 and 22 weeks of pregnancy. First-time mothers usually feel it between 18 and 20 weeks; women in subsequent pregnancies about a week earlier. An anterior placenta can delay perception by one to three weeks.

There is a moment most pregnant women describe with real tenderness: the first unmistakable sense that something is moving inside. It arrives quietly, usually between the fourth and fifth months, and often gets mistaken for a gas bubble or a muscle twitch before the penny drops. That first perception of fetal movement has a clinical name — quickening — and it is one of the defining milestones of the second trimester.

Understanding the typical timeline, the factors that shift it earlier or later, and how to monitor movement well once it is established can make the difference between unnecessary anxiety and well-founded reassurance.

## When does quickening happen, and what affects the timing?

Clinically, quickening can occur anywhere between 13 and 25 weeks of gestation, though the practical window for most pregnant women is **14 to 22 weeks**. According to [NIH StatPearls on Fetal Movement](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470566/), women in their first pregnancy tend to report first sensations between 18 and 20 weeks, while those in subsequent pregnancies — having already learned to recognize the sensation — typically feel movement about one week earlier. Fetal movement itself begins much earlier than mothers feel it: the fetus is making coordinated movements as early as the first trimester, but the uterus is too small and the movements too weak for the abdominal wall to register them.

Several factors can shift the timing of first perception:

  - **Placenta position.** This is the factor most likely to surprise women. When the placenta implants on the anterior wall of the uterus — the side nearest your abdomen — it creates a cushion between the fetus and your skin that can delay perception by **one to three weeks** compared to a posterior placement. Anterior placentas are common and completely normal; you will catch up with time, but in the meantime, you should not compare your timeline to a friend whose placenta sits at the back.

  - **Body composition.** A higher body mass index can attenuate the transmission of movement to the abdominal wall, meaning more adipose tissue between the uterus and the surface tends to push first perception later.

  - **Experience and attention.** In a first pregnancy, women simply do not know what fetal movement feels like, so they may dismiss the sensation for days or weeks. Women in second or later pregnancies have a reference point and identify it faster.

  - **Position of the baby.** A fetus that is positioned with its back against your front wall may produce less clearly felt movement than one facing outward.

The [American Pregnancy Association](https://americanpregnancy.org/pregnancy/first-fetal-movement/) describes the earliest quickening sensations as fluttering, bubbling, or a faint tapping — something that many first-time mothers initially attribute to intestinal activity. Later, as the second trimester progresses, these sensations become unmistakably distinct: rolling movements, sharp jabs, and eventually hiccups felt as small rhythmic jolts at regular intervals.

By approximately 28 weeks, fetal movement is well established and consistent, with research documenting an average of roughly **30 movements per hour** in the third trimester. Fetuses are typically most active between 9 p.m. and 1 a.m., which corresponds to normal fluctuations in maternal blood glucose throughout the day.

Anterior placenta note
If your anatomy scan (typically performed at 18–22 weeks) shows an anterior placenta, your provider should note this in your records. Do not compare your movement-awareness timeline to other pregnant women or online community norms — your experience will likely be one to three weeks behind what others describe, and that is anatomically expected.

## How does the count-to-10 kick counting method work?

Kick counting — formally called fetal movement counting — is the standard clinical method for monitoring fetal well-being through maternal perception. While formal counts are most commonly recommended starting at **28 weeks**, midwives and OB-GYNs typically encourage developing awareness of your individual baby's normal movement pattern during the second trimester, so you have a meaningful baseline before third-trimester monitoring begins.

The most widely used technique is the **count-to-10 method**, which the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the Cleveland Clinic both endorse:

  - Choose the same time each day — ideally a period when your baby is typically active, which for many women is evening.

  - Lie on your **left side**. This position improves uterine blood flow, which tends to stimulate fetal activity and produces more consistent movement counts than sitting upright.

  - Count each distinct movement — a kick, roll, jab, or flutter — until you reach **10**.

  - Record the start time and the time you reach 10 movements. A kick-count app or a simple paper log works equally well.

According to [Cleveland Clinic's guidance on kick counts](https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/23497-kick-counts), ACOG advises calling your provider if you do not feel 10 movements within **two hours** during a period when your baby is usually active. Most babies reach 10 movements well within that window — often in 20 to 30 minutes — so if you are regularly counting to 10 in a short time, that is reassuring. The goal is pattern recognition: a baby who typically moves 10 times in 15 minutes and one day takes 90 minutes warrants a call even though 90 minutes is under the two-hour threshold.

  Fetal Movement: What to Expect by Stage

      Stage
      Typical Timeline
      What Mothers Describe
      Clinical Guidance

      Earliest quickening (1st pregnancy)
      18–20 weeks
      Fluttering, bubbling, soft tapping
      No formal counting yet; build awareness of pattern

      Earliest quickening (subsequent pregnancies)
      16–18 weeks
      Recognizable earlier due to experience
      Same — awareness building, not formal counts

      Established movement
      ~28 weeks
      Distinct kicks, rolls, jabs, hiccups
      Begin formal count-to-10 kick counting daily

      Late third trimester
      32–40 weeks
      Strong movements; may feel positional shifts
      Continue daily counts; report any marked decrease

## Why are at-home fetal Dopplers discouraged?

Commercially available handheld fetal Doppler devices — sold under brand names including Sonoline and HiBaby — have grown popular as a way to hear the baby's heartbeat between appointments. The appeal is understandable: waiting weeks between visits is anxious-making, and the idea of checking in anytime is comforting. But the clinical and regulatory consensus is clear: **routine unsupervised home use is not recommended**.

The FDA classifies fetal Dopplers as Class II prescription medical devices and has warned against unsupervised consumer use since 2014. Two distinct concerns underpin that position:

**1. The theoretical safety question.** Ultrasound energy can generate minor tissue heating and, in some conditions, acoustic cavitation. Brief, supervised professional exposures are considered safe — the evidence for harm at diagnostic levels is thin. But uncontrolled at-home use with no cap on session duration or frequency introduces uncertainty about cumulative exposure that does not exist in a clinical setting where time is limited and intentional.

**2. The false reassurance problem — and this is the more pressing concern.** A Doppler tells you one thing: there is a heartbeat. It tells you nothing about amniotic fluid volume, placental function, or movement pattern — the actual clinical indicators of fetal well-being. A mother who finds a heartbeat on her Doppler may feel reassured enough to delay calling her provider about reduced fetal movement or other warning signs that require actual clinical assessment. That delay can matter.

The UK's National Health Service echoes this concern explicitly. Both ACOG and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) advise that any concern about your baby's well-being should prompt a call to your obstetric provider — not reliance on a consumer device. If you are worried about movement, lying on your left side and counting kicks is safer, more informative, and free.

*This article provides general information and is not a substitute for individualized medical advice. If you have concerns about your baby's movement at any stage of pregnancy, contact your midwife or OB-GYN directly.*

## Sources

1. [Fetal Movement](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470566/)
2. [First Fetal Movement: Quickening in Pregnancy](https://americanpregnancy.org/pregnancy/first-fetal-movement/)
3. [Kick Counts (Fetal Movement Counting): Purpose & How To](https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/23497-kick-counts)
4. [FDA Says to Avoid Fetal Ultrasound Keepsake Images, Heartbeat Monitors](https://www.itnonline.com/article/fda-says-avoid-fetal-ultrasound-keepsake-images-heartbeat-monitors)
5. [At Home Fetal Doppler: How Early It Works and Safety Concerns](https://www.healthline.com/health/pregnancy/at-home-fetal-doppler)

---
Source: https://natalnew.com/trimesters/quickening-when-you-feel-baby-move
Index: https://natalnew.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://natalnew.com/llms-full.txt
