Pregnancy Tool

Pregnancy BMI & Weight Gain

Find your pre-pregnancy BMI and your recommended weight gain range. Based on UK NICE and Institute of Medicine guidelines — with week-by-week targets and twin-pregnancy adjustments.

✓ NICE + IOM aligned ✓ Metric or imperial ✓ Week-by-week targets ✓ Supports twin pregnancies
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Calculate your BMI & weight gain range

Enter your height and pre-pregnancy weight. Metric or imperial — whichever you prefer.

Your weight before getting pregnant, or at your earliest pregnancy appointment.
Leave blank if not yet pregnant or unsure.
Your pre-pregnancy BMI
Recommended total weight gain

Where you sit on the BMI scale

BMI categories are set by the World Health Organisation and used throughout UK antenatal care.

Underweight Below 18.5
Normal 18.5 – 24.9
Overweight 25 – 29.9
Obese 30 and above

Where you are right now

Weight gained so far
Target range this week
Gain expected by this point
Status

Your week-by-week gain targets

Expected total weight gained by the end of each trimester milestone.

How the calculation works

Body mass index (BMI) is a single number that expresses the relationship between your height and weight. It's calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by height in metres squared. A woman weighing 65kg at 165cm tall has a BMI of 23.9 — comfortably in the normal range. The same weight at 150cm produces a BMI of 28.9 — in the overweight category. Height changes everything.

For pregnancy, what matters is your BMI before you became pregnant — or at your earliest antenatal appointment if pre-pregnancy weight isn't known. This baseline determines your recommended weight gain range for the pregnancy. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines, adopted by NICE, set different recommended ranges for each of the four BMI categories. Women who started their pregnancy underweight are advised to gain more; those who started with a higher BMI are advised to gain less.

These ranges aren't targets to hit precisely. They're evidence-based bands within which the best outcomes for mother and baby have been observed. Falling slightly outside the range doesn't mean something is wrong — but sustained weight gain well above or below the range is a conversation worth having with your midwife.

BMI has known limits

BMI doesn't distinguish muscle from fat, doesn't account for body composition differences across ethnic groups, and was developed for population-level analysis rather than individual assessment.

In pregnancy it's used as a starting reference for weight gain planning — not as a verdict on your health. Your midwife will consider it alongside your full clinical picture.

Recommended weight gain by BMI category

These ranges come from the Institute of Medicine's 2009 guidelines and are the reference used by NICE, NHS, and private maternity providers in the UK.

BMI category BMI range Singleton gain Twin gain
UnderweightBelow 18.512.5 – 18 kg (28 – 40 lbs)Not specified*
Normal weight18.5 – 24.911.5 – 16 kg (25 – 35 lbs)17 – 25 kg (37 – 54 lbs)
Overweight25 – 29.97 – 11.5 kg (15 – 25 lbs)14 – 23 kg (31 – 50 lbs)
Obese30 and above5 – 9 kg (11 – 20 lbs)11 – 19 kg (25 – 42 lbs)

*Insufficient evidence for twin pregnancies in underweight women — follow clinical advice from your midwife.

Where all that weight actually goes

Most of the weight gained in pregnancy isn't fat. Here's how 12kg of typical gain breaks down by the end of pregnancy.

Baby

~3.4 kg
Your baby at birth — the most visible part of the gain.

Placenta

~0.7 kg
The organ that has supported your baby throughout pregnancy.

Amniotic fluid

~0.9 kg
The fluid your baby has been floating in.

Uterus

~1.1 kg
Your uterus has grown roughly 15 times its pre-pregnancy size.

Breast tissue

~0.9 kg
Changes that prepare your body for feeding.

Blood volume

~1.8 kg
Your blood volume rises by about 50% during pregnancy.

Fluid & tissue

~1.4 kg
Extra fluid retention supporting circulation and tissues.

Fat stores

~1.8 kg
Energy reserve for breastfeeding and postnatal recovery.

When to speak to your midwife

Weight gain in pregnancy varies widely. Some signs warrant a conversation rather than self-management.

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Talk to your midwife or GP if:

You've gained significantly more than the IOM range suggests in a short time; you've lost weight after the first trimester rather than gaining; your BMI before pregnancy was above 30 or below 18.5; you have nutrition concerns, persistent nausea, or a history of eating disorders; or you have underlying conditions (diabetes, thyroid issues, hypertension) that interact with weight management in pregnancy. This calculator is a reference, not a replacement for clinical care.

Frequently asked questions

Where do these weight gain ranges come from?

From the Institute of Medicine's 2009 report, "Weight Gain During Pregnancy: Reexamining the Guidelines." These remain the reference adopted by NICE, the NHS, and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. The ranges are based on analysis of thousands of pregnancies showing the best outcomes for mother and baby within those bands.

What if I don't know my pre-pregnancy weight?

Use your weight at your earliest antenatal appointment — typically the booking appointment around 8–10 weeks, when the baby still contributes very little to your total weight. If you're seeing this calculator for the first time later in pregnancy, estimate from memory as best you can and speak to your midwife about your actual starting weight at booking.

I'm not gaining as fast as the calculator says I should. Is that a problem?

Not necessarily. Weight gain in pregnancy is famously non-linear — many women gain very little in the first trimester, especially with morning sickness, then catch up in the second. What matters more than hitting the weekly target exactly is the overall trajectory across the whole pregnancy. If you're well below the range by 20 weeks or losing weight after the first trimester, that's worth discussing with your midwife.

Does BMI work differently for women of different ethnicities?

There's evidence that standard BMI thresholds underestimate health risks for some populations — particularly South Asian, Chinese and some Black African and Caribbean groups. NICE acknowledges this and recommends using lower BMI cutoffs for certain ethnic groups in non-pregnancy contexts. For pregnancy weight gain, the IOM ranges remain the primary reference, but your midwife will consider your full clinical picture.

What if I'm pregnant with twins?

Twin pregnancies have higher recommended weight gain ranges because there are two babies, two placentas, and more amniotic fluid to account for. Switch the pregnancy type toggle to "Twin" and the calculator applies the IOM twin-pregnancy ranges. Women in the underweight category don't have specified twin-pregnancy guidance because the evidence base is limited — follow your midwife's advice.

Should I be dieting during pregnancy?

No. Pregnancy is not the time for calorie restriction or weight-loss diets. Nutritional needs increase during pregnancy — particularly in the second and third trimesters, when an additional 200–300 kcal per day is typical. The goal is to gain the right amount of healthy weight, not to lose weight. If you have concerns, your midwife or a specialist dietitian can help you plan appropriately.

What happens if I gain significantly more than the recommended range?

Excessive weight gain in pregnancy is associated with higher rates of gestational diabetes, larger babies, caesarean delivery, and difficulty losing weight postnatally. Your midwife may recommend nutritional guidance or additional monitoring. The goal isn't to penalise — it's to support better outcomes. If you're worried about your gain trajectory, ask for a referral to a specialist midwife or dietitian.

Monitor your baby's growth with an ultrasound scan

From 24 weeks, our growth scans track your baby's size, wellbeing and fluid levels. Particularly valuable if your BMI is outside the normal range or if your midwife has flagged any concerns.

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