Understanding Healthy Weight Gain in Pregnancy
Gaining the right amount of weight during pregnancy is one of the most impactful things you can do for both your health and your baby's development. Too little weight gain is associated with preterm birth and low birth weight; too much increases risks of gestational diabetes, hypertension, and difficult labour. Your ideal range is personal — determined primarily by your pre-pregnancy BMI.
The IOM Guidelines Explained
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) — now the National Academy of Medicine — published its 2009 guidelines on gestational weight gain, which remain the global clinical standard. These guidelines set different target ranges based on a woman's pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), recognising that a woman who enters pregnancy underweight has different physiological needs than one who enters overweight. These are the same guidelines used by the World Health Organisation, the NHS, and obstetric associations worldwide.
Why the First Trimester Gain Is Minimal
Many women are surprised to learn that very little extra weight is expected in the first trimester — typically just 0.5 to 2 kg total. This is because during weeks 1–13, the embryo is developing rapidly but remains extremely small. The placenta, amniotic fluid, and maternal blood volume have not yet significantly increased. The major gains come in the second and third trimesters when the baby grows from a few grams to over 3 kg and all supporting tissues expand substantially.
Nourish Your Pregnancy from Within
Explore our prenatal nutrition range — folic acid, iron, DHA, and pregnancy multivitamins to support healthy weight gain and fetal development.
The Role of Nutrition Quality Over Quantity
The phrase "eating for two" is one of the most persistent and harmful myths in pregnancy nutrition. The extra caloric need in pregnancy is modest — roughly 340 additional calories per day in the second trimester and 450 in the third. That's equivalent to a handful of nuts and a piece of fruit, not a second full meal. What matters far more is the quality of those calories. Protein supports fetal tissue growth; iron prevents anaemia; calcium builds bones and teeth; folate protects the neural tube; and omega-3 fatty acids support brain development. A diet rich in whole grains, lean proteins, dairy or alternatives, vegetables, and healthy fats delivers all of these efficiently.
