Am I pregnant? Take the 2 minute quiz
Updated July 2, 2026
No quiz or website can tell you whether you are pregnant. Only a pregnancy test, which detects the hormone hCG, can confirm it. What this quiz can do: use your cycle timing and symptoms to tell you how late your period actually is and the earliest date a home test is likely to be reliable for you.
When did your last period start?
This helps estimate where you are in your cycle. Nothing you enter leaves your browser.
How long is your typical cycle?
Count from the first day of one period to the first day of the next. Not sure? 28 is the most common answer, but most cycles are not exactly 28 days.
Have you had sex since your last period started?
Answer for this cycle only.
Is your period late?
We will also compute this from your dates, but tell us how it feels to you.
Are your breasts unusually tender or swollen?
One of the earliest changes some people notice.
Any nausea or queasiness, especially in the morning?
Nausea usually starts after a missed period, not before, so no nausea means very little either way.
Are you more tired than usual?
Rising progesterone can cause real fatigue in early pregnancy. It also causes fatigue before a period.
Anything else on this list?
Check all that apply.
Whatever your test shows, stop guessing next month
Safr learns your cycle so a late period never catches you off guard again. Log your period, see your predictions, and track symptoms and temperature.
🔒 All calculations happened in your browser. Nothing you entered was stored or sent anywhere.
Looking for an online or virtual pregnancy test?
An online pregnancy test does not exist. Pregnancy is confirmed by detecting the hormone hCG in urine or blood, and no website or phone can measure a hormone. That includes apps that claim to test pregnancy with a fingerprint scan or by placing your thumb on the screen: those are entertainment apps, not tests. What a good quiz or calculator can do is the timing math: how late your period really is based on your own cycle length, and the earliest day a home test is likely to give you a trustworthy answer. That is exactly what this quiz does.
How the quiz works
Your answers feed the same calendar math used in the Safr app. From your last period date and cycle length we estimate ovulation (about 15 days before your next expected period), your expected period date, and how many days late you are. Home pregnancy tests measure hCG, which typically becomes detectable 12 to 15 days after ovulation, which is why testing on or after the day of your missed period gives the most reliable result. Testing earlier can produce a false negative even when you are pregnant.
Common questions
How accurate is an am I pregnant quiz?
A quiz cannot detect pregnancy at all, so it has no accuracy in the way a test does. It can accurately do the calendar math on your cycle and tell you when a real test is worth taking. Treat any quiz result, here or anywhere else, as guidance about timing, not an answer.
When should I take a pregnancy test?
The first day of your missed period or later. If your cycles are irregular, wait at least 21 days after the sex you are unsure about. Testing with first morning urine helps because hCG is most concentrated then. If the result is negative and your period still does not come, retest in 2 to 3 days.
Can I be pregnant with no symptoms?
Yes. Many pregnancies have no noticeable symptoms before a missed period. Symptoms are the least reliable part of this quiz, which is why the timing questions matter more.
My period is late but the test is negative. What now?
Wait 2 to 3 days and retest. If you tested before or right at your missed period, hCG may not have reached a detectable level yet. If your period is more than 10 days late with repeated negative tests, talk to a clinician about other causes of a missed period.
Is this quiz anonymous?
Yes. Every calculation runs in your browser. We do not collect, store, or transmit anything you enter, and there is no email capture. When you leave the page, your answers are gone.
Sources
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Menstruation in girls and adolescents: using the menstrual cycle as a vital sign. Committee Opinion No. 651. 2015.
- NHS. Doing a pregnancy test. nhs.uk/pregnancy/trying-for-a-baby/doing-a-pregnancy-test/. Accessed July 2026.
- Wilcox AJ, Weinberg CR, Baird DD. Timing of sexual intercourse in relation to ovulation. N Engl J Med. 1995;333(23):1517-1521.
- Wilcox AJ, Baird DD, Weinberg CR. Time of implantation of the conceptus and loss of pregnancy. N Engl J Med. 1999;340(23):1796-1799.
- Steward K, Raja A. Physiology, ovulation and basal body temperature. StatPearls. 2023.