Reverse Due Date Calculator

Enter your estimated due date or birth date and instantly find when your last period started and when conception most likely occurred.

๐Ÿ”„ Reverse Due Date Calculator
Estimated Due Date (EDD)
Menstrual Cycle Length28 days
days
21 days45 days
Baby's Birth Date
Estimated Last Period (LMP)
Estimated Conception Date
Conception Window
Estimated Conception Date
Estimated LMP
Conception Window

๐Ÿ”„ What is a Reverse Due Date Calculator?

A reverse due date calculator works backwards from a known reference point (the estimated due date or the actual birth date) to determine when the last menstrual period (LMP) most likely started and when conception most likely occurred. This is the opposite of a standard due date calculator, which takes the LMP as input and projects forward to the EDD. The reverse tool is useful when the end-point of pregnancy is already known and the starting dates need to be reconstructed.

The most common use cases are: (1) a pregnant person who received an EDD from an ultrasound and wants to know what their LMP was, particularly if they had irregular or absent periods at the time of conception; (2) a parent who wants to know when their child was conceived, now that the birth date is known; (3) someone trying to determine a conception window for legal, medical, or personal reasons; and (4) anyone who wants to understand the full pregnancy timeline by filling in dates they do not have on hand.

The calculation uses two core obstetric relationships: pregnancy from LMP lasts 280 days (40 weeks) for a standard 28-day cycle, and pregnancy from conception lasts a fixed 266 days (38 weeks). The cycle-length adjustment only changes the LMP estimate, not the conception date, because the time from conception to delivery is constant regardless of how long the follicular phase was. This means the conception date is always EDD minus 266 days, while the LMP is EDD minus 280 days adjusted for cycle length.

A common misconception is that knowing the conception date can definitively establish paternity. In reality, this calculator provides an estimated 6-day window during which conception could have occurred, based on sperm viability (3 to 5 days) and egg viability (12 to 24 hours). Paternity requires DNA testing, not date estimation. Another misconception is that the LMP date is when pregnancy begins; clinically, pregnancy is counted from LMP even though conception occurs roughly two weeks later.

๐Ÿ“ Formula

LMP  =  EDD − (280 + (Cycle − 28)) days
LMP = estimated first day of last menstrual period
EDD = estimated due date (the known input)
280 = standard gestation length from LMP in days (40 weeks, 28-day cycle)
Cycle = your actual menstrual cycle length in days
Cycle adjustment = adds (Cycle − 28) to LMP subtraction for non-28-day cycles
Conception date: Conception = EDD − 266 days (always, regardless of cycle length)
Conception window: Conception − 3 days to Conception + 3 days (6-day range)
From birth date: Conception = Birth − 266 days; LMP = Birth − 280 days
Example (28-day cycle): EDD = November 8, 2026. LMP = November 8 − 280 = February 1, 2026. Conception = November 8 − 266 = February 15, 2026.
Example (32-day cycle): EDD = January 17, 2027. LMP = January 17 − 284 = April 8, 2026. Conception = January 17 − 266 = April 26, 2026.

The 266-day conception-to-delivery constant comes from Naegele's rule combined with standard ovulation timing. Naegele's rule adds 280 days to the LMP. For a 28-day cycle, ovulation occurs on day 14, so conception is LMP plus 14, and delivery is LMP plus 280, giving 280 minus 14 = 266 days from conception. For any other cycle length, ovulation shifts (cycle minus 14 days after LMP), but the luteal phase and gestation from conception remain the same, so EDD minus conception always equals 266 days.

๐Ÿ“– How to Use This Calculator

Steps

1
Choose your calculation mode - Select From Due Date if you know your EDD (from a doctor visit, ultrasound report, or standard due date calculator), or From Birth Date if the baby has been born and you know the actual birth date.
2
Enter your date - Type or pick your EDD or birth date. For EDD mode, enter the exact date your healthcare provider gave you or that you calculated from your LMP.
3
Adjust cycle length if needed - In From Due Date mode, drag the Menstrual Cycle Length slider if your cycle is not 28 days. Each day of difference from 28 shifts the estimated LMP by one day. The conception date does not change.
4
Click Calculate to see your results - The calculator instantly shows your estimated LMP, estimated conception date, and a 6-day conception window. Use the share buttons to copy or send your results.

๐Ÿ’ก Example Calculations

Example 1 - Standard 28-Day Cycle from EDD

EDD November 8, 2026, cycle 28 days

1
Cycle adjustment = 28 - 28 = 0 days. LMP = November 8 minus 280 days = February 1, 2026.
2
Conception = November 8 minus 266 days = February 15, 2026. Ovulation occurred approximately 14 days after LMP, which is February 1 plus 14 = February 15. This confirms both methods agree.
3
Conception window = February 12 to February 18, 2026 (3 days on each side). Any unprotected intercourse during this 6-day window could have resulted in this pregnancy.
LMP = February 1, 2026 | Conception = February 15, 2026
Try this example →

Example 2 - Longer Cycle (32 Days) from EDD

EDD January 17, 2027, cycle 32 days

1
Cycle adjustment = 32 - 28 = +4 days. LMP = January 17 minus 284 days = April 8, 2026. Without the adjustment, a 28-day assumption would give April 12, 2026, which would be 4 days too late.
2
Conception = January 17 minus 266 = April 26, 2026. Ovulation in a 32-day cycle occurs on day 18 (32 minus 14 = 18). April 8 plus 18 = April 26. Both methods agree.
3
Conception window = April 23 to April 29, 2026. Note that the LMP shifted by 4 days compared to a 28-day cycle, but the conception date and window are the same as what a standard conception calculator would show.
LMP = April 8, 2026 | Conception = April 26, 2026
Try this example →

Example 3 - From Birth Date

Baby born June 5, 2026

1
Conception = June 5 minus 266 days = September 12, 2025. This assumes a full-term 38-week pregnancy from conception. If the birth was preterm at, say, 34 weeks, the actual conception was closer to 34 times 7 = 238 days before birth, or about September 30, 2025.
2
LMP = June 5 minus 280 days = August 29, 2025 (assuming 28-day cycle). The LMP would be 14 days before conception: September 12 minus 14 = August 29. Both methods agree for a 28-day cycle.
3
Conception window = September 9 to September 15, 2025. Any intercourse during this window with a viable sperm count could have resulted in conception that led to a June 5, 2026 birth.
Conception = September 12, 2025 | LMP = August 29, 2025
Try this example →

โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find my LMP if I know my due date?+
Subtract 280 days from your EDD for a 28-day cycle. If your cycle is longer, subtract additional days equal to (your cycle length minus 28). For example, a 30-day cycle means subtract 282 days from the EDD. This calculator handles the arithmetic instantly when you enter your EDD and cycle length.
How do I find my conception date from my due date?+
Subtract 266 days from your EDD. This is always the formula regardless of cycle length, because gestation from conception to delivery is a fixed 266 days (38 weeks). A 32-day cycle shifts the LMP estimate but not the conception date. Enter your EDD in From Due Date mode and the calculator computes this instantly.
Can I find the conception date from the birth date?+
Yes. Subtract 266 days from the birth date to estimate conception, or subtract 280 days to estimate the LMP. This assumes a full-term 38-week pregnancy from conception. For a preterm birth (before 37 weeks), the actual conception date will be later than the formula suggests. Use the From Birth Date mode to get instant results, then adjust manually for gestational age at birth if needed.
How accurate is the estimated conception date from an EDD?+
The accuracy depends on how the EDD was set. An EDD from an early ultrasound (8 to 12 weeks) carries a margin of plus or minus 5 days, so the conception date estimate is accurate to within about 5 days. An EDD from LMP alone carries a margin of 1 to 2 weeks for regular cycles, wider for irregular ones. The 6-day window this calculator shows does not fully cover LMP-based uncertainty; add 1 to 2 weeks of buffer when the EDD came from LMP alone.
Why does cycle length affect the LMP but not the conception date?+
The luteal phase (ovulation to next period) is a fixed 14 days in most women. Only the follicular phase (LMP to ovulation) varies with cycle length. Because conception happens at ovulation, and ovulation is always 14 days before delivery minus 266 days, the EDD-to-conception gap is always 266 days. The LMP is simply conception minus the follicular phase length, which equals cycle length minus 14.
What does the conception window represent?+
The conception window is a 6-day range (3 days before the central estimate to 3 days after) representing all dates during which intercourse could have resulted in the pregnancy. Sperm can survive 3 to 5 days inside the reproductive tract, and an egg is viable for 12 to 24 hours after ovulation. The combination means unprotected intercourse anywhere in this window has a biological chance of causing conception.
Can the reverse due date calculator help determine paternity?+
It can provide a conception window that can be compared to known dates of intercourse, but it cannot confirm paternity. Because the window spans 6 days and sperm viability can extend even beyond that, the window often overlaps dates with multiple potential partners. Only DNA paternity testing provides a definitive answer. This calculator is informational only and should not be used for legal paternity disputes.
What if my EDD was changed by a mid-pregnancy ultrasound?+
Use the most recent clinically accepted EDD. If a second-trimester scan (14 to 26 weeks) shifted the EDD by more than 10 to 14 days from the LMP estimate, that scan-based date is likely more accurate. However, second-trimester scans carry a larger margin of error (plus or minus 10 to 14 days) than first-trimester scans (plus or minus 5 days), so the conception window produced by a late scan revision will be wider than this calculator shows.
How does a preterm or post-term birth affect the from-birth-date calculation?+
The From Birth Date mode assumes a full-term 38-week (266-day) gestation from conception. A preterm birth at 34 weeks means actual gestation from conception was 34 times 7 = 238 days, not 266. To correct for this, subtract the actual gestational age in days (weeks times 7) from the birth date to find conception, rather than subtracting 266. Similarly, a post-term birth at 42 weeks (294 days from LMP) means conception was 280 days before birth.
Is this the same as the conception calculator?+
They complement each other but serve different directions. The Conception Calculator takes LMP as input and works forward to show the fertile window and EDD. The Reverse Due Date Calculator takes the EDD or birth date as input and works backwards to show the LMP and conception date. Both use the same underlying math; they differ in which date is the known starting point.
Can I use this calculator if I had an IVF pregnancy?+
Yes, with a caveat. For IVF pregnancies, the EDD is set by adding a fixed number of days to the egg retrieval or transfer date (for example, 266 days for Day-3 transfer or 263 days for Day-5 blastocyst transfer). The EDD is precise. Entering it in From Due Date mode will give you the equivalent LMP and conception date, though for IVF the LMP is a calculated reference rather than an actual period date. The actual fertilization date is known from the retrieval date, so use that directly rather than relying on the conception estimate.