Exercise is one of the most powerful tools you have for supporting fertility — but like most things in reproductive health, the dose matters. Too little and you miss out on significant hormonal and circulatory benefits. Too much and you can actually impair ovulation.
This guide helps you find the sweet spot.
150 minutes of moderate exercise per week is the sweet spot for fertility. Fertility yoga combines gentle movement, breathwork, and stress reduction — targeting multiple fertility pathways simultaneously. The best exercise is the one you enjoy and will do consistently.
How Exercise Affects Fertility
Regular moderate exercise benefits fertility through several mechanisms:
- Hormone regulation: Improves insulin sensitivity, supports healthy estrogen and progesterone levels
- Blood flow: Increases circulation to reproductive organs, supporting follicular development and endometrial growth
- Stress reduction: Lowers cortisol, activates endorphins
- Body composition: Helps maintain a healthy weight, which influences ovulation
- Sleep quality: Improves the sleep that regulates reproductive hormones
- Inflammation: Reduces chronic low-grade inflammation
A large study in Human Reproduction found that women who engaged in moderate exercise had improved fertility outcomes compared to both sedentary women and those who exercised vigorously. Specifically, moderate exercisers had a 20% higher pregnancy rate than sedentary women, while vigorous exercisers saw diminishing returns.
The Goldilocks Zone
| Activity Level | Impact on Fertility | Who This Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary (<60 min/week) | Negative — missed hormonal benefits | Gradually increase activity |
| Light (60–120 min/week) | Positive — some benefits | Good starting point |
| Moderate (150–210 min/week) | Optimal — maximum fertility benefit | The target for most women |
| Vigorous (300+ min/week) | Potentially negative — may suppress ovulation | Scale back if cycles are irregular |
“Moderate” means you can carry a conversation but can’t sing. Think brisk walking, gentle swimming, yoga, light cycling, or easy hiking.
Fertility Yoga Explained
Fertility yoga is a specialized practice that combines gentle hatha and restorative yoga with fertility-specific intentions. It’s not about flexibility or fitness — it’s about creating the optimal physiological environment for conception.
Why Yoga Specifically?
Yoga is uniquely suited to fertility because it addresses multiple pathways simultaneously:
- Parasympathetic activation: Breathwork and gentle movement shift the nervous system out of “fight or flight”
- Pelvic blood flow: Hip-opening poses increase circulation to the uterus and ovaries
- Stress hormones: Studies show yoga reduces cortisol more effectively than other forms of exercise
- Emotional processing: The mindfulness component helps with the emotional weight of TTC
- Sleep improvement: Evening restorative yoga improves sleep quality
Yoga Essentials for Your Practice
A good yoga mat and bolster make fertility yoga more comfortable and effective — especially for the restorative poses that are most beneficial.
Browse Yoga Sets on AmazonKey Fertility Yoga Poses
Hip Openers (Increase Pelvic Blood Flow)
Butterfly Pose (Baddha Konasana)
Sit with soles of feet together, knees falling out to the sides. Gently fold forward. Hold for 1–3 minutes. This opens the hips and increases blood flow to the pelvic region. Use a bolster under your forehead for a more restorative version.
Pigeon Pose (Eka Pada Rajakapotasana)
A deep hip opener that releases tension stored in the hip flexors and external rotators. Hold each side for 1–2 minutes. Use a bolster or blanket under the hip for support if needed.
Wide-Legged Forward Fold (Prasarita Padottanasana)
Increases blood flow to the pelvis and gently decompresses the lower back. Hold for 30–60 seconds. Let the head hang heavy to release neck tension.
Restorative Poses (Nervous System Reset)
Legs Up the Wall (Viparita Karani)
Lie on your back with legs extended up a wall. A bolster under the hips adds a gentle inversion. Hold for 5–15 minutes. This is one of the most calming, restorative poses in yoga — excellent for the luteal phase.
Supported Bridge (Setu Bandha Sarvangasana)
Lie on your back with a block or bolster under the sacrum, legs extended or feet flat. Opens the front body, gently inverts the pelvis, and activates the parasympathetic nervous system. Hold for 3–5 minutes.
Guided Fertility Yoga Programs
Circle+Bloom Yoga for Fertility
A guided program that combines fertility yoga poses with visualization and breathwork, matched to your cycle phase. Each session is designed to support the specific hormonal needs of that phase.
Learn MoreFor complementary stress-reduction strategies: Stress & Fertility: The Mind-Body Connection.
Other Fertility-Friendly Exercise
| Exercise | Fertility Benefit | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Brisk Walking | Gentle cardio, stress reduction, outdoors = vitamin D | Daily, 20–30 min |
| Swimming | Full-body, joint-friendly, calming | 2–3x per week |
| Light Strength Training | Improves insulin sensitivity, builds bone density | 2–3x per week |
| Pilates | Core stability, pelvic floor awareness, flexibility | 2–3x per week |
| Cycling (moderate) | Cardio without high impact | 2–3x per week, light intensity |
| Dancing | Joyful movement, stress relief, cardio | As desired |
Exercising by Cycle Phase
Menstrual Phase (Days 1–5)
Honor low energy. Gentle yoga, walking, stretching. Restorative poses. This is not the time to push. Your body is doing important work.
Follicular Phase (Days 6–13)
Energy rises with estrogen. This is your time for more vigorous activity — strength training, faster-paced yoga, longer walks or swims. Take advantage of the natural energy boost.
Ovulation (Days 13–15)
Peak energy. Moderate activity is fine. Avoid extreme exertion that could spike cortisol during this critical window. Hip-opening yoga can help support blood flow to the reproductive organs.
Luteal Phase (Days 16–28)
Scale back intensity, especially during the two-week wait. Walking, gentle yoga, swimming, and restorative poses. Avoid high-impact activities and very hot exercise (hot yoga). Support progesterone with rest.
What to Avoid When TTC
- Excessive endurance training: Marathon training, intense daily spinning, or training for endurance events can suppress ovulation (hypothalamic amenorrhea)
- Hot yoga (Bikram): The extreme heat may be harmful during the TWW and early pregnancy
- Very high-intensity daily workouts: CrossFit-level intensity every day can elevate cortisol and suppress reproductive hormones
- Extreme caloric restriction + exercise: Under-fueling while exercising intensely is a recipe for hypothalamic amenorrhea
If your periods are regular and your cycle length is consistent (24–35 days), your exercise routine is likely fine. If your cycles become irregular, lengthen, or you lose your period, that’s a sign to scale back intensity and increase caloric intake.
Frequently Asked Questions
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