The Science of Conception Timing
Sperm can survive for several days, while the egg is viable for about 12-24 hours. That is why the best days to get pregnant usually fall before ovulation, not only on ovulation day.
Medical review: Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD · Board-certified OB-GYN with 15+ years of clinical experience · Updated March 17, 2026
Methodology and sourcesTrying to Conceive
Find your fertile window and get a personalized day-by-day TTC plan for this cycle - because timing is everything when you're trying to conceive.
Medical review: Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD · Board-certified OB-GYN · Updated March 2026
How It Works
Sperm can survive for several days, while the egg is viable for about 12-24 hours. That is why the best days to get pregnant usually fall before ovulation, not only on ovulation day.
The luteal phase is the time from ovulation to your next period. A very short luteal phase can make timing harder to interpret, and BBT can help confirm when ovulation actually happened.
If you are under 35, seeking help after 12 months of trying is reasonable. If you are 35 or older, 6 months is a common benchmark. Irregular cycles, known PCOS, endometriosis, or repeated losses are also reasons to ask sooner.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Tools
Use the general ovulation calculator with cycle and luteal phase settings.
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Review your fertile days with a probability-first visualization.
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If this cycle works, calculate due date, pregnancy week, and baby development.
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Record cycle history locally to improve TTC timing estimates.
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Use a wider window if your cycles vary month to month.
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Map the due date from LMP, conception date, ultrasound, or IVF.
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Sources
This page explains TTC timing for education and planning. It does not replace medical advice. Current editorial review remains aligned with the rest of the site: Board-certified OB-GYN with 15+ years of clinical experience. Last reviewed: March 17, 2026.