How Early Can I Take a Pregnancy Test?

How Soon Can I Take A Pregnancy Test? 

...and other Top FAQs

It's probably one of the most-asked questions we receive here by email. Everyone wants to know: "How soon can I take a pregnancy test?" Of course, there are a number of variations on this question, particularly for women who are fertility charting and who want to know - exactly - at how many days past ovulation they can begin testing (and hopefully get that earliest positive result). Below, we'll look at all the facts and details relating to answering this question - and give you the most informed framework for hazarding a "best guess" on when you can begin!

Question: When Can I Take A Pregnancy Test? And the answer is.... that depends! Yes, as with all good questions, there is never a good, easy, simple one size-fits all answer. But we will be happy to provide you with all the variables involved in answering this question for yourself, and hopefully this can give a relatively good picture for a time frame for testing.

The Variables Involved in Pregnancy Testing:

1. The HCG Sensitivity of a Given Test (high sensitivity pregnancy tests are able to detect pregnancy sooner than "regular" pregnancy tests)

2. The Rate of hCG Production

3. Urine Dilution / Consumption of Liquids

4. What Time of Day You Test

5. Do You Know When You Ovulated? (Ovulation tests or a fertility monitor should be used to help determine this.)

6. Actual moment of "Implantation"

Let's begin with some background info. A pregnancy test functions by homing in on one specific reproductive hormone that starts flowing through your body the moment you become pregnant. This is not the moment of conception, however. Conception is when a sperm and egg unite (aka fertilization). The fact is that a pregnancy is "inaugurated" not at the moment of fertilization, but when a fertilized egg actually "hooks up" to your womb. That is the moment you are pregnant, and the time that this unique hormone (hCG) is able to flow from the placental tissue into the bloodstream of the mother. From the blood, the hCG circulates through the body and ends up in the urine as well.

Ovulation and Implantation: Now, here's the confusing part that makes answering this big question of "When Can I Take a Test" a bit difficult. Once the egg is fertilized, it floats around for a few days - even up to a week or so - before it is able to nestle its way into a comfortable home in the uterine lining (or wall of the womb). Theoretically, if you ovulate on Cycle Day 14, and you "conceive" on day 14 or 15, the embryo will just be hanging around looking for that special place to snuggle up into the womb. It's possible that your implantation date can take place just a handful of days after conception. But it's also possible that it can take up to a week or more! Thus, it is not possible to pinpoint a specific day when you can test and get that long-sought-for positive result. However, if you know when you ovulate (thanks to ovulation tests) you can still better focus in on a pregnancy test start date.

hCG Levels: The next crazy variable to confound us in seeking an answer to the big question is how fast hCG increases in your system. The fact is, different embryos will produce hCG at a faster or slower pace, depending on the woman and where the embryo implants. This means that for some women, hCG levels will rocket and for others it may trickle a bit at first. The good news here is that the amount of hCG in your body will increase rapidly - and double almost daily. This is called the doubling rule, the exponential increase of the hormone, and it means that even if hCG production is lower for some women, it won't take too much longer for the amount to reach the threshold required for a pregnancy test to detect the presence of the hormone in blood or urine.

Test Sensitivity: The next variable can be controlled when you purchase a test. In the past, most tests had lower sensitivity thresholds, meaning that they required you to wait at least until your missed period to begin taking a test. Many tests still ask you to do so. However, newer FDA-Approved products do allow you to test before your missed period, including certain drugstore tests like First Response and affordable, high-sensitivity test kits available online. The highest (reasonable) threshold is 20mIU/ml/hCG. This means that the amount of hCG in a given urine sample must exceed this "trigger" level for a positive test line to be produced. So, using higher sensitivity tests, the answer to the big question is: You may begin testing at around seven to ten days past ovulation. But wait!!! As noted above, variables like implantation date and rate of hormone production do not guarantee a positive result during this early testing window. According to research data, it's likely that you may first see a positive pregnancy test during this time, but a negative result is still possible and does not close out the possibility of pregnancy. It's wise and recommended to conduct follow up tests!

FMU and Hold Time: Okay, so we now have a kind of fuzzy time-frame for knowing when to start taking a pregnancy test. At this point, we can look at other variables to help ensure that we can increase the accuracy of the result. These are factors we can control simply by following the directions in the instructional insert and taking certain steps to ensure that the hCG in a given urine sample will be at its highest levels. If you have been around this website, then you already know that testing with First Morning Urine is the first big factor in getting the earliest positive test result. First morning urine will exhibit a higher concentration of the hormone than samples collected at other times of the day. That's because all night, while you have slept, hCG has been allowed to accumulate in your urine. Now, if you do end up testing during other times of day, there are some things you can do to increase result accuracy. First, in the hours before you "pee for a test", try to avoid flushing the body with a lot of liquids. Never dehydrate yourself! Just take it easy on the liquids and hold your urine as long as possible before you collect a sample or pee on that stick.

If you are trying to conceive and are fertility charting, then you will know the approximate date of ovulation. With that fact, you can pretty much determine the approximate days for when you can take a pregnancy test. Best of luck and babydust to all!

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Comments

I m 27 years old and trying to conceive. This is the 4th year of my marriage.After my marriage my periods was irregular, had a treatment to regulate my periods. But still i didn't conceive. Later i had scans and it was normal and from 4 months onwards my periods are regular. I had my cycle for 23 days.I HAD MY LAST PERIOD ON 9TH OF MAY.According to this i has to get my period on 1st of june,but i didn't get the period. We have unprotected sex on 15th to 20th day of my period.Now it is 14th June, i want to clarify whether i m pregnant. I can;t say the exact symptoms because i don't have clarity,feeling some uneasiness, that's it. PLS CAN U HELP ME ....

My period began on the 18th of May, 2010. I had sex on day 12 and day 14 with my husband. My cycle is 28 days always. Ovulation around day 14. When can I take a test and can it be possible that I can be pregnant

I am not supposed to get my period for another two days, but I tested anyway... The test was negative but I noticed the tips on my nipples have changed color and a sticky milky like substance comes out of them if they are squeezed ever so slightly.. I know I should see a dr but it's a weekend. I've been having slight cramping and clear discharge so heavy that it feels like I got my period but no blood... it is the weekend.. so no dr visit..

I have not got my period in almost 2months!!!! I thought I was pergent. I took a test and it said im not! What do i do from here? What can it be?

okay,
I had my period from June 1st to June 6th. & i'm on birth control but i ran out on the day i ended my period. The next day i got more and took Sunday & mondays pill. But i had sex on monday, unprotectedly. I want to see if I am pregnet, how long till i can take the pregnency test?
love, worried. ):

I got off birth control 11 days ago my boyfriend ejaculated inside of me could I be pregnant? I've had a period once I got off the pill it lasted a week

Hi My name is geetha and i am 33 yrs old, married abt 2 yrs ago. i get my 3-day periods regularly but in 22- 25 days gap. my last period was on may 6th, 2010 and the previous month - 12th april, 2010. i had sex with my husband between may 14th - may 25th. now my expected period date is between 31st may and 2nd june. but i didnt get my periods till now. what could be the reason. Is the delay to due to pregnancy. i tried pregnancy test on june 3rd, but the result was negative. Please advise as to what needs to be done.

I'm 23 years old, me and my husband have been trying to concive for 6 months now. I startrd my menstral on the 10 of may and ovulated of the 24th. We made love the day before I ovulated and on the day. I think I fell my period coming soon. Why can't we concive? I'm young and get regular periods• wat am I doing wrong? Some one please help

My husbnad and i are trying to concieve. My last period was 16th May and since it ended we have been having sex everyday.. however i need to go for a scan on the 8th June and am worried if i DO get pregnant before then will this effect the pregnancy then as the scan is a procedure that puts a camera up the vagina

please help

I had unprotected sex january 29, 2010, i had been getting my periods every 30-31 days since, for about a week i've been feeling a ticklish moving sensation in my lower abdoman, and sudden sharp pinching in my side, sometimes i feel a moving sensation either on the left or right side of my lower abdoman, and my lower stomach feels tight, i've been constipated, also I'm 36 years old.

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First Day of Last Period:
Cycle Length:
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Note that you are most likely to get pregnant if you time your lovemaking to occur on the days right before - and on - your ovulation date. Keep in mind that the projected ovulation date above is simply a “best guess” estimate based on your cycle date information. The most accurate way to pinpoint your most fertile time is through the use of urine-based ovulation tests or with a fertility monitor. We have partnered with Early-Pregnancy-Tests.com, the Internet’s leading supplier of preconception products since 2001, to offer low-cost, FDA-approved pregnancy and ovulation tests – with free same-day shipping.

 

Now that you’ve calculated your ovulation date using our ovulation calculator, we have a number of other helpful tools you can use to help increase your chances of conceiving.

 

  • Create your own personalized ovulation calendar! You can even provide an email address so that you receive email alerts of your most fertile days, when you can begin testing for pregnancy, and more.
     

  • Create your own personalized fertility chart! This is a highly accurate way to pinpoint your ovulation date that relies primarily on basal temperature charting. (Visit Early-Pregnancy-Tests.com for an accurate, inexpensive basal thermometer.)
     

  • Connect with others at our online community! If you have questions about trying-to-conceive – or if you just want to vent a bit – we have a wonderful, vibrant community of people who’d just love to hear from you.

Find your most fertile time.