Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Sample Input | Value | Estimated Output |
|---|---|---|
| Last period start | 2026-03-01 | Cycle begins on March 1, 2026 |
| Average cycle length | 28 days | Expected next period around March 29, 2026 |
| Luteal phase length | 14 days | Estimated ovulation around March 15, 2026 |
| Shortest to longest cycle | 26 to 31 days | Wider fertile range for planning flexibility |
| Period length | 5 days | Helps label the current cycle phase |
Formula Used
Estimated ovulation day = Average cycle length − Luteal phase length
Estimated ovulation date = Last period start + Estimated ovulation day
Fertile window = Ovulation date − 5 days through Ovulation date + 1 day
Expected next period = Last period start + Average cycle length
Current cycle day = ((Today − Last period start) mod Average cycle length) + 1
Irregular-cycle range uses shortest and longest cycle lengths to expand the earliest and latest likely fertile dates.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the first day of your most recent period.
- Add your average cycle length from recent months.
- Enter your shortest and longest cycle to reflect variation.
- Keep the luteal phase at 14 days unless you track it.
- Select how many future cycles you want to forecast.
- Press Calculate Countdown to view estimates above the form.
- Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records and PDF for sharing.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Does this calculator confirm ovulation?
No. It estimates likely timing from cycle patterns. Basal body temperature, ovulation tests, cervical mucus tracking, or clinical advice can give better confirmation.
2. Why does it ask for shortest and longest cycles?
Those values create a wider planning range when your cycle varies. A larger gap means the fertile window estimate is less precise.
3. What is the luteal phase?
It is the time between ovulation and the next period. Many people average about 14 days, but personal tracking may show a different pattern.
4. Can I use this with irregular cycles?
Yes, but treat results as broad estimates. Irregular cycles reduce date precision, so the range matters more than the single ovulation day.
5. Why is the fertile window longer than one day?
Sperm can survive several days, and the egg lives briefly after ovulation. That is why the window usually includes days before ovulation too.
6. Should I rely on this for contraception?
No. Calendar estimates alone are not a reliable birth control method. Speak with a qualified clinician about safer contraceptive options.
7. What does the suggested test date mean?
It marks the day after the predicted next period. Many people choose that point for home testing if a period has not started.
8. When should I seek medical advice?
Contact a clinician for very painful periods, frequent missed periods, heavy bleeding, fertility concerns, or cycle changes that persist.