A common fertility myth is that a woman canโt get pregnant when menstruating. While the odds for pregnancy are lower on the days youโre on your period, they arenโt zero.
If youโre trying to get pregnant (or trying not to get pregnant), tracking your cycle is important. It will help you keep track of the most fertile days when you can more easily conceive.
A common fertility myth is that a woman canโt get pregnant when sheโs on her period. While the odds for pregnancy are lower on the days youโre on your period, they arenโt zero.
Hereโs what you need to know about fertility and having sex on your period.
RELATED: Before I Miss My Period, Can I Say I Am Pregnant?
How does conception occur?
The ability to conceive is miraculous. It requires the meeting of a maleโs sperm with a femaleโs egg. Once a womanโs ovary releases an egg, the egg lives for only between 12 and 24 hours. The male sperm can live for about three days.
The typical female cycle is 28 days. Day 1 is when she starts her period. A woman typically ovulates around day 14 (but it could be around days 12, 13, or 14).
Ovulation is when a womanโs ovary releases an egg for fertilization. If a sperm is available in the uterus, pregnancy can occur.
Ovulation can vary based on a womanโs cycle. Some women have a longer cycle of around 35 days between periods. Ovulation would then happen around day 21. Women with a shorter cycle of 21 days ovulate around day 7.
How can a woman get pregnant on her period?
Itโs easy to mistake vaginal bleeding for the beginning of a period. Itโs possible you could bleed during ovulation when youโre most fertile. This could easily be mistaken for a period. Having unprotected sex at this time dramatically increases your chances of becoming pregnant.
For the average woman, the ovulation cycle is somewhere between 28 and 30 days. This means that if you have sex while on your period, you wonโt likely ovulate until several days later.
But women with a shorter cycle wouldnโt have the same amount of time between having their periods and ovulating.
Another consideration is that a manโs sperm can live inside a woman for up to 72 hours after ejaculation. Toward the end of your period, your chances of becoming pregnant will increase.
If youโre curious about your ovulation patterns, you can track the number of days between your periods. This includes when you start your period, and then when you start your period again.
Over several months, you can identify a pattern to determine roughly when your ovulation cycle occurs.
RELATED: Five Days Past Ovulation(DPO): The Early Pregnancy Symptoms
What are the chances a woman can get pregnant during her period?
A womanโs likelihood of getting pregnant can rise and fall throughout her ovulation cycle. While the average femaleโs monthly cycle maybe 29 days, others may have a cycle that varies from 20 to 40 days or longer.
The likelihood that a woman will get pregnant one to two days after she starts bleeding is nearly zero. But the likelihood starts to increase again with each successive day, even though sheโs still bleeding.
At roughly day 13 after starting her period, her chance of pregnancy is an estimated 9 percent.
While these numbers may be low, it doesnโt mean a woman can ever be 100 percent assured that she wonโt get pregnant on her period.
RELATED: Cramps but No Period: Early Pregnancy Symptoms
Birth control precautions
If youโre trying to get pregnant, having sex on your period wonโt likely help you to conceive unless your menstrual cycle is less than 28 days. But itโs always possible that you could become pregnant.
If youโre not trying to become pregnant, itโs important to have protected sex every time. This includes using some form of contraception like wearing a condom or taking birth control pills.
Birth control pills will not provide a barrier against sexually transmitted diseases like herpes, gonorrhea, or chlamydia. To protect yourself from unwanted infections, have your partner wear a condom.
Takeaway
A womanโs ovulation cycles can vary, so itโs statistically possible you could become pregnant while on your period. While pregnancy is less likely in the earlier days of your period, the chances increase in the later days.
If youโre trying to become pregnant and havenโt conceived after a year or more of having unprotected sex, contact your doctor. They can recommend methods of tracking your ovulation, as well as fertility experts.
Your doctor can also provide testing and treatments that will help you increase your chances of conception.