Enter Cycle Details
Results appear above this form after submission. Use recent cycle history for a better estimate, and add a shortest and longest cycle if your timing varies.
Example Data Table
This example shows how the calculator translates one cycle record into practical planning dates.
| Last Period Start | Average Cycle | Luteal Phase | Predicted Ovulation | Fertile Window | Next Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 01, 2026 | 28 days | 14 days | Mar 14, 2026 | Mar 09 to Mar 15 | Mar 29, 2026 |
| Apr 05, 2026 | 30 days | 14 days | Apr 20, 2026 | Apr 15 to Apr 21 | May 05, 2026 |
Formula Used
Ovulation cycle day = Average cycle length − Luteal phase length
Ovulation date = First day of last menstrual period + (Ovulation cycle day − 1)
Fertile window = Ovulation date − 5 days through Ovulation date + 1 day
Next period estimate = First day of last menstrual period + Average cycle length
If you enter shortest and longest recent cycles, the calculator also estimates a broader fertility range for irregular patterns.
How to Use This Calculator
1. Enter your last period start date
Use the first day of menstrual bleeding, not the last day of spotting.
2. Add your average cycle length
If you know it, enter your usual cycle length. If not, recent cycle history can improve the estimate.
3. Confirm luteal phase and period length
The default luteal phase is 14 days, but some people track a shorter or longer pattern.
4. Add optional cycle history
Recent cycle lengths help the tool average your pattern instead of relying on one single number.
5. Review the prediction summary
After submission, check the ovulation date, fertile range, next period estimate, chart, and export options above the form.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. How accurate is an ovulation date predictor?
It gives a calendar estimate based on cycle timing. Accuracy improves when cycles are regular and recent data is entered. It cannot confirm actual ovulation.
2. Can this calculator help with irregular cycles?
Yes. Enter the shortest and longest recent cycles to see a broader fertility range. That wider window is more realistic when ovulation timing shifts from month to month.
3. What is the luteal phase?
The luteal phase is the time between ovulation and the next period. Many people average about 14 days, but individual patterns can differ.
4. Why does the fertile window begin five days before ovulation?
Sperm may survive in the reproductive tract for several days. Because of that, fertility can begin before the egg is released.
5. Does this result confirm ovulation happened?
No. This is a prediction only. Ovulation tests, hormone tracking, cervical mucus observation, or temperature charting can give stronger evidence.
6. Should I enter cycle history values?
Yes, when you have them. Recent cycle history helps smooth unusual months and can produce a more realistic average cycle estimate.
7. When should I speak with a clinician?
Consider clinical advice if cycles are very irregular, absent, unusually painful, extremely heavy, or if you have been trying to conceive without success.
8. Can this be used as birth control?
No. Calendar estimates alone are not reliable contraception. Ovulation can shift because of stress, illness, travel, or normal biological variation.