Nutrition & Wellness
Pregnancy-Safe Exercises by Trimester: Your Complete Movement Guide
You don’t have to stop exercising when you become pregnant. In fact, movement during pregnancy offers real benefits—lower gestational diabetes risk, easier labor, faster postpartum recovery, and better mental health. The key is understanding what’s safe as your body changes across trimesters.
Quick Answer: The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week during pregnancy. Most exercises are safe throughout pregnancy with modifications. What changes is intensity, impact, and positioning—not whether you can move. Safe options include walking, swimming, stationary cycling, modified strength training, and pelvic floor work. Stop exercise immediately if you experience vaginal bleeding, chest pain, dizziness, calf pain, or contractions.
ACOG Exercise Guidelines: The Gold Standard for Pregnancy Fitness
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists provides clear, evidence-based exercise recommendations for pregnancy. Here’s what you need to know:
- Target: 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week (about 30 minutes, 5 days a week)
- Strength training: 2 days per week of resistance exercise using moderate intensity
- Intensity: Moderate intensity means you can talk but not sing during exercise (the “talk test”)
- Frequency: Spread activity throughout the week rather than doing it all at once
- Consistency: Regular exercise (most days) is better than sporadic intense efforts
- Flexibility: If you weren’t exercising before pregnancy, start slowly and gradually increase (this isn’t the time to train for a marathon)
These guidelines apply to most pregnancies without complications. If you have high-risk pregnancy factors (gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, preterm labor risk, etc.), your doctor may modify recommendations. Always check with your healthcare provider about exercise during pregnancy, especially if you had a sedentary lifestyle before conceiving.
First Trimester Exercises: Maximize Benefits While Managing Fatigue
What’s Happening to Your Body
In the first trimester, you’re not yet noticeably bigger, but your body is undergoing significant changes. Progesterone relaxes ligaments and muscles. Your blood volume and heart rate increase. Fatigue is often overwhelming. Despite feeling like you should be able to do everything you did before pregnancy, your body is working hard even at rest.
Safe First Trimester Exercises
Walking: The gold standard exercise for pregnancy. Walking is safe throughout pregnancy, requires no equipment, and is as effective as you make it. Aim for 30 minutes most days, or break it into 10-minute segments. Outdoor walking on varied terrain is great if your balance feels stable; otherwise, stick to even paths.
Swimming and water aerobics: Swimming is excellent because water supports your weight (reducing stress on joints) while providing resistance. It’s low-impact, helps with swelling, and feels wonderful when you’re uncomfortable. Water aerobics classes designed for pregnancy are ideal. Even just floating and gentle movement in water is beneficial.
Stationary cycling or recumbent bikes: Safer than outdoor biking in early pregnancy when balance might be affected. Stationary cycling maintains cardiovascular fitness with low impact. As pregnancy progresses and your center of gravity shifts, recumbent bikes become more comfortable than upright bikes.
Elliptical trainer: Similar to cycling but uses more muscles. The elliptical provides lower-impact cardiovascular work. Make sure you can maintain balance as pregnancy progresses.
Prenatal yoga: Gentle yoga classes designed for pregnancy help with flexibility, breathing, and pelvic floor awareness. Avoid hot yoga and poses that put pressure on your abdomen or require lying flat on your back for extended periods.
Modified strength training: In the first trimester, you can continue strength exercises if you did them pre-pregnancy. Use lighter weights than before, focus on controlled movement, and avoid heavy lifting or exercises requiring you to hold your breath. Squats and lunges (with proper form) are great for leg strength needed for labor and delivery.
First Trimester Fatigue Reality Check
Many pregnant people dramatically reduce activity in the first trimester simply because they’re exhausted. This is okay. The ACOG recommendations are ideals, not requirements. If you’re struggling with nausea and fatigue, 10-15 minutes of gentle walking is better than nothing and better than stressing about meeting a target. Listen to your body. Once energy returns in the second trimester, you can increase intensity if desired.
Second Trimester Exercises: When Energy Returns and Movement Gets Comfortable
What’s Changing
In the second trimester (weeks 13-27), many pregnant people feel amazing. Nausea often resolves, energy returns, and your baby bump is visible but not yet very limiting. You’re stronger and more stable than early pregnancy. This is often the “golden window” for exercise. However, your center of gravity is shifting, and ligament laxity is increasing.
Safe Second Trimester Exercises
All first trimester exercises continue: Walking, swimming, cycling, and yoga remain excellent choices with appropriate modifications.
Hiking: Great for cardiovascular fitness and mental health. Stick to well-maintained trails and avoid scrambling or high-altitude hikes. Bring plenty of water and watch for balance issues as your bump grows.
Tennis and other racquet sports: Safe if you were doing these before pregnancy, as long as you avoid sudden direction changes that could stress your loosened ligaments. Competitive singles might get uncomfortable; doubles is easier.
Strength training modifications: Continue strength exercises with these modifications:
- Avoid heavy lifting (more than 25-35 pounds depending on pre-pregnancy fitness)
- Avoid exercises requiring you to lie flat on your back for extended periods after the first trimester (opt for side-lying or inclined positions)
- Skip abdominal exercises that create significant intra-abdominal pressure (crunches, sit-ups, planks)
- Avoid high-impact plyometrics (jumping, burpees)
- Focus on controlled, stable movements
- Include pelvic floor-strengthening exercises (Kegels)
Modified running (if you ran pre-pregnancy): If you were a runner before pregnancy, continuing to run in the second trimester is generally safe, but impact increases stress on your joints and pelvic floor. Some pregnant people run comfortably; others find walking or pool running easier. Listen to your body and consider switching to lower-impact activities as pregnancy progresses. Avoid running for the first time during pregnancy.
Spin or stationary cycling classes: Stationary bike classes designed for pregnancy are excellent. Adjust the seat as your belly grows to maintain proper form. Stop if you feel unstable.
Third Trimester Exercises: Adaptation and Pelvic Floor Focus
What’s Happening
By week 28, your baby bump is significant, your center of gravity has shifted considerably, and balance becomes a real issue. Ligament laxity is at its peak, making joints less stable. Breathing can be harder with the baby pushing on your lungs. Your energy might decrease again. But movement is still important—it can ease discomfort, support easier labor positioning, and maintain cardiovascular fitness into the final weeks.
Safe Third Trimester Exercises
Walking: Walking becomes even more important in the third trimester. Gentle, frequent walking helps maintain fitness while managing the significant weight and balance changes. Pelvic floor strain increases with impact, so walking is often ideal when running becomes uncomfortable.
Swimming: Many pregnant people feel more comfortable in the third trimester water than on land. Water supports your weight completely, reduces swelling, and feels amazing. Swimming in the third trimester offers psychological and physical relief that land-based exercise can’t match.
Stationary cycling (recumbent preferred): Recumbent bikes are more comfortable than upright bikes when you’re very pregnant. Adjust positioning as needed for comfort.
Prenatal yoga and stretching: Gentle yoga and stretching help with flexibility and discomfort, and they prepare your body and mind for labor. Avoid forward folds and deep twists.
Pelvic floor exercises (Kegels and pelvic floor training): These become especially important in the third trimester. Strong pelvic floor muscles improve pushing ability during labor and reduce incontinence postpartum. Practice Kegels daily: contract your pelvic floor muscles (the muscles you use to stop urinating midstream) for 5 seconds, relax for 10 seconds, and repeat 10-15 times. Do this several times per day.
Labor positioning and movement: In the third trimester, practice positions that help with labor and delivery:
- Pelvic tilts (on hands and knees or standing)
- Squats with support (holding onto a sturdy chair or your partner)
- Lunges with support
- Side-lying positions with a pregnancy pillow
- Hands and knees positions (great for back pain relief)
- Gentle hip circles standing or on a stability ball
Avoid in third trimester: High-impact activities, exercises requiring balance on unstable surfaces, abdominal exercises, or anything that causes dizziness or discomfort. As your belly grows, simple things like lying on your back become uncomfortable and restrict blood flow. Your body will tell you when activities are no longer comfortable.
Exercises to Avoid Throughout Pregnancy
Certain exercises are unsafe throughout pregnancy, regardless of trimester:
- Contact sports: Anything with collision risk (soccer, basketball, martial arts) risks abdominal trauma.
- High-impact sports with falling risk: Skiing, snowboarding, horseback riding, skateboarding, and similar sports increase injury and fall risk.
- Diving or breath-holding: Scuba diving and breath-holding exercises pose decompression risks to the baby.
- Hot yoga or exercise in extreme heat: Elevated core temperature in early pregnancy may affect fetal development. Avoid exercising in temperatures above 85°F or in very hot environments.
- High-altitude training: Extreme altitude (above 8,000 feet for extended periods) may reduce oxygen to the baby.
- Heavy lifting (more than 25-35 pounds): Risk of pelvic floor stress and injury to joints.
- Supine exercises for extended periods after first trimester: Lying on your back compresses the vena cava (major vein returning blood to the heart), potentially reducing blood flow to the baby.
- High-intensity interval training (HIIT): Especially if not done before pregnancy. This intensity isn’t necessary for pregnancy fitness benefits.
- Sit-ups, crunches, or planks: These create excessive intra-abdominal pressure and can contribute to diastasis recti (abdominal muscle separation).
- Double leg raises: Puts strain on lower back and abdominal muscles.
Warning Signs to Stop Exercise Immediately
Stop exercising and contact your healthcare provider if you experience:
- Vaginal bleeding or fluid leakage
- Chest pain or pressure
- Severe shortness of breath (not just normal pregnancy breathlessness)
- Dizziness or feeling faint
- Calf pain, swelling, or warmth (could indicate blood clot)
- Abdominal pain
- Regular contractions or cramping during or after exercise
- Severe headache
- Muscle weakness
- Any concerning symptom your body is signaling
Most of these are rare, but they’re important to monitor. Trust your body. If something feels wrong, stop and call your doctor.
Practical Exercise Tips for All Trimesters
- Wear supportive shoes: As your center of gravity shifts and ligaments loosen, proper footwear matters. Avoid high heels and very flexible flat shoes.
- Invest in a supportive maternity bra: A good sports bra reduces breast discomfort during exercise. Breasts become very sensitive in pregnancy.
- Stay hydrated: Dehydration increases dizziness and overheating risk. Drink water before, during (if exercising longer than 15 minutes), and after exercise.
- Warm up and cool down: Spend 5 minutes gradually increasing intensity and another 5 minutes bringing your heart rate down. Stretching during cool-down helps with flexibility.
- Avoid overheating: Keep your core temperature stable. Stop if you feel too hot, and ensure you’re in a cool environment.
- Exercise on flat surfaces: Uneven terrain increases falling risk as balance becomes harder.
- Exercise with a partner when possible: Having someone present is safer if you feel dizzy or need assistance.
- Eat something before exercise: Low blood sugar increases dizziness risk. A small snack (fruit, granola bar) before exercising helps.
- Don’t exercise to exhaustion: The goal is fitness maintenance, not achievement. Use the “talk test”—you should be able to have a conversation during moderate-intensity exercise.
- Consider prenatal fitness classes: Classes specifically designed for pregnancy with instructors who understand pregnant bodies are ideal.
- Track how you feel: Some days you’ll feel strong and able to move more; other days you’ll need gentler activity. Both are okay.
Postpartum Exercise Transition
As you approach your due date, recognize that exercise might change suddenly. You might feel able to walk and do gentle yoga until labor begins, or your body might signal that it’s time to slow down a few weeks before delivery. Both scenarios are normal.
After delivery, exercise resumes based on how you delivered and how you’re recovering. Vaginal delivery without complications typically allows return to gentle walking and pelvic floor exercises within days, progressing to other activities over weeks. Cesarean delivery requires more time for healing—typically 6 weeks before heavier activity. Your healthcare provider will give you specific clearance for exercise postpartum.
For postpartum recovery details, see our guide to postpartum recovery timeline. And for fitness in pregnancy, remember that consistency and gentleness matter more than intensity.
Why Exercise Matters in Pregnancy
Beyond the obvious health benefits, exercise during pregnancy offers specific advantages:
- Reduced gestational diabetes risk: Moderate exercise reduces risk of gestational diabetes by about 30%.
- Lower preeclampsia risk: Regular exercise is associated with reduced preeclampsia risk.
- Shorter labor and reduced cesarean rate: Fit pregnant people often have easier labors with higher vaginal delivery rates.
- Better postpartum recovery: People who exercise during pregnancy recover faster and regain fitness more quickly after delivery.
- Lower anxiety and depression risk: Exercise reduces postpartum depression and anxiety risk by up to 28%.
- Easier weight loss postpartum: People who maintain fitness during pregnancy lose pregnancy weight more easily.
- Improved sleep and energy: Regular movement improves sleep quality and energy levels.
- Reduced pregnancy discomfort: Exercise helps with back pain, swelling, and overall discomfort.
These benefits are significant. Exercise isn’t vanity during pregnancy—it’s healthcare.
Sample Weekly Exercise Plans by Trimester
First Trimester Sample Week
- Monday: 20-minute walk
- Tuesday: Rest or gentle yoga (15 minutes)
- Wednesday: 30-minute swim
- Thursday: Rest
- Friday: 20-minute stationary bike or walk
- Saturday: 30-minute prenatal yoga class
- Sunday: Rest or gentle walk (10 minutes)
Second Trimester Sample Week
- Monday: 30-minute walk or hike
- Tuesday: 30-minute strength training (modified, lighter weights)
- Wednesday: 45-minute swim or water aerobics
- Thursday: Rest or gentle yoga
- Friday: 30-minute cycling
- Saturday: 30-minute prenatal yoga or pilates class
- Sunday: 20-minute walk and pelvic floor exercises
Third Trimester Sample Week
- Monday: 30-minute walk
- Tuesday: 30-minute swim
- Wednesday: Rest or gentle yoga (focus on labor positions)
- Thursday: 20-minute walk
- Friday: 30-minute stationary cycling or water exercise
- Saturday: Prenatal yoga class with labor positioning focus
- Sunday: Gentle walk, pelvic floor exercises, stretching
When to Get Medical Clearance Before Exercising
Talk to your doctor before starting exercise if you have:
- A high-risk pregnancy (gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, preterm labor risk, etc.)
- Heart or lung conditions
- Complications in a previous pregnancy
- Placental issues
- Bleeding during pregnancy
- Any condition requiring special monitoring
Your doctor may recommend modified exercise or no exercise depending on your specific situation. Always prioritize safety over fitness goals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can exercise cause miscarriage?
No. Moderate exercise does not cause miscarriage. Miscarriage is usually due to chromosomal issues unrelated to maternal activity. If you’re at risk for miscarriage due to medical conditions, your doctor will advise you specifically. Moderate exercise is safe and actually reduces some pregnancy complications.
Is it safe to start exercising if I wasn’t active before pregnancy?
Yes, but start slowly. Pregnancy is not the time to train for a marathon, but you can begin a gentle walking program or prenatal yoga. Start with 10-15 minutes a few days per week and gradually increase. Your goal is maintenance and health, not fitness achievement.
Can exercise affect milk supply for breastfeeding?
Moderate exercise does not affect milk supply. Staying very hydrated and eating enough calories supports both exercise and milk production. Very high-intensity exercise can produce lactic acid that might slightly affect milk taste, but this is rare and not a reason to avoid exercise while breastfeeding.
Is it safe to do core exercises during pregnancy?
Traditional core exercises like crunches, sit-ups, and planks should be avoided because they create excessive intra-abdominal pressure. Instead, focus on pelvic floor strengthening and exercises like modified bird-dogs, side planks, and pelvic tilts that maintain core strength without damaging abdominal muscles.
Can I run while pregnant?
If you were a runner before pregnancy, you can usually continue running in the first and second trimester with modifications (lower intensity, more frequent breaks). In the third trimester, many pregnant people switch to walking due to balance changes and increased pelvic floor stress. Never start running for the first time during pregnancy.
Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice. Every pregnancy is unique, and exercise recommendations vary based on individual health status, fitness level, and pregnancy complications. Before starting or continuing an exercise program during pregnancy, consult with your healthcare provider. They can give you personalized guidance and medical clearance based on your specific situation. Stop exercising and contact your doctor immediately if you experience any warning signs listed in this article.
Author: iPrego Editorial Team | Last Updated: March 26, 2026
Sources: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) Exercise Guidelines for Pregnancy; CDC Physical Activity During Pregnancy Recommendations; Physical Activity and Exercise During Pregnancy; Maternal Exercise and Gestational Diabetes Prevention; Pelvic Floor Training and Labor Outcomes