There is a beautiful idea at the heart of preconception care: that the body you bring to pregnancy is, in part, the body you prepare in the months beforehand. The egg that will be released, the nutrient stores you will draw on, the steadiness of your cycle — much of that is shaped before conception ever happens. This is not about pressure or perfection. It is about gently laying a good foundation. Here is what the science highlights, explained simply, girl to girl.

An important note before we begin. This article is general education, not medical advice. Preconception and pregnancy are deeply personal and medical, and the right plan for you depends on your own health, history and needs. Please treat everything here as a starting point for a conversation with your doctor or midwife — not a substitute for one.

Why the months before matter — the preconception window

Pregnancy nutrition is often discussed as something that begins with a positive test. But by then, some of the most important developmental work is already underway. The baby's neural tube — which becomes the brain and spinal cord — develops in the very first weeks, often before a woman even knows she is pregnant.

This is why medical bodies emphasise preparing before conception. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends starting a daily prenatal supplement with folic acid at least one month before pregnancy, and fertility specialists frequently suggest beginning a preconception supplement one to three months ahead to build nutrient stores in advance.

Source: Nutrition During PregnancyACOG; and Prenatal vitamins: Why they matter, how to chooseMayo Clinic.

Preparing your body before pregnancy is like preparing soil before planting. It does not guarantee anything — but it gives everything that follows a better foundation.
How long before trying to conceive should I start preparing my body?
Most medical bodies suggest beginning preconception preparation around one to three months before trying to conceive. ACOG recommends starting a daily folic acid supplement at least one month before pregnancy, and fertility specialists often suggest a preconception supplement one to three months ahead to build nutrient stores. This is general educational information — your own doctor can advise on the right timing for you.

The nutrients the research keeps returning to

No single nutrient is magic, and no supplement replaces a varied, nourishing diet. But certain nutrients come up again and again in preconception guidance because they play critical roles early — sometimes before pregnancy is even confirmed.

Folate (folic acid). The most emphasised of all. Folate supports the formation of the neural tube in the earliest weeks, which is why it is recommended before conception rather than after. It is found in leafy greens, citrus, beans and lentils, and is the nutrient most consistently recommended as a supplement in the preconception window.

Source: Evidence based recommendations for an optimal prenatal supplement for women in the USPMC, 2022.

Iron. Many women begin their reproductive years already low in iron because of monthly menstrual losses. Building iron stores beforehand matters because the demand rises considerably in pregnancy. Iron is found in red meat, lentils, beans and fortified cereals, and is absorbed better alongside vitamin C.

Omega-3 fatty acids (DHA). Omega-3s support hormone production and are important for the baby's developing brain and eyes. They are found in oily fish such as salmon and sardines, and in walnuts, flaxseed and chia. Some research suggests they may also support egg quality, though the evidence there is still developing.

Vitamin D, iodine, choline and B vitamins. Vitamin D supports bone health and reproductive function and is one of the nutrients many women are low in. Iodine and choline matter for early brain development, and choline in particular is often under-consumed and not always included in prenatal supplements. The B vitamins support energy and the formation of red blood cells.

Source: Dietary Supplements and Life Stages: PregnancyNIH Office of Dietary Supplements.

On doses and supplements: the specific amounts that are right for you — including whether you need a higher dose of any nutrient, and which form (for example, methylfolate if you have an MTHFR gene variant) — are genuinely individual. This is exactly the kind of thing to bring to your doctor rather than self-prescribe.
What nutrients matter most before pregnancy?
Nutrients commonly highlighted for the preconception period include folate (folic acid), iron, iodine, choline, omega-3 fatty acids (DHA), vitamin D, and B vitamins. Folate is emphasised because the baby's neural tube forms in the first weeks of pregnancy, often before a woman knows she is pregnant. This is general information — a healthcare provider can assess your individual needs.

Your cycle as a sign of readiness

One of the most empowering things you can do in the preconception window is to get to know your cycle. A regular, ovulatory cycle is often considered a useful general sign of reproductive health — because ovulation is, quite simply, what makes conception possible. The estrogen-led follicular phase builds toward ovulation; ovulation releases the egg; and the progesterone-led luteal phase prepares the uterine lining afterward.

Tracking your cycle helps in two ways. It teaches you your own rhythm and fertile window, and it makes irregularities visible early — which is valuable, because irregular or absent cycles can have many causes worth exploring with a doctor before trying to conceive.

Does my menstrual cycle tell me anything about fertility readiness?
A regular, ovulatory cycle is often considered a useful general sign of reproductive health, because ovulation is what makes conception possible. Tracking your cycle can help you understand your patterns and identify your fertile window. Irregular or absent cycles can have many causes and are worth discussing with a doctor, especially when trying to conceive.

The part most guides skip — stress and your nervous system

Nourishment is not only nutrients. The state of your nervous system matters too, and the mechanism is real. Chronic stress activates the HPA axis and raises cortisol, and cortisol can interfere with the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis — the very system that governs ovulation. Severe or prolonged stress is recognised as a factor that can disrupt the menstrual cycle, sometimes delaying or suppressing ovulation entirely.

Source: Review on stress-induced menstrual disorders2025. Chronic stress activates the HPA axis, which can interfere with the HPO axis that controls the cycle.

This is not a reason to add "be less stressed" to your list of pressures — that helps no one. It is simply a reason to treat rest, sleep, gentle movement and whatever genuinely calms you as part of preparing your body, not separate from it. Occasional stress is part of life and unlikely to be decisive. It is the chronic, grinding kind that is worth tending to.

Can stress affect my chances of conceiving?
Chronic stress raises cortisol, which can interfere with the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis that governs ovulation, and severe or prolonged stress is recognised as a factor that can disrupt the menstrual cycle. While occasional stress is normal and unlikely to be decisive, supporting your nervous system through sleep, gentle movement and stress management is a reasonable part of general preconception wellness. Persistent cycle disruption should be discussed with a doctor.

A gentle preconception foundation

If you are thinking about pregnancy in the months ahead, here is a calm, general way to think about preparing — to discuss and personalise with your own doctor:

Eat the rainbow, build your stores. A varied diet rich in vegetables, fruit, whole grains, quality protein and healthy fats provides most of what your body needs and builds the nutrient reserves pregnancy draws on.

Talk to your doctor about a preconception or prenatal supplement, particularly for folate, and ask what is right for your individual situation.

Get to know your cycle, so you understand your rhythm and can spot anything irregular early.

Tend to your nervous system with sleep, gentle movement and genuine rest — not as another task, but as part of the nourishment.

Have a preconception conversation with your doctor. A check-in before trying to conceive is one of the most useful things you can do, and the moment to address anything specific to you.

Understanding your hormonal cycle is the foundation under all of this. If you would like to learn how your four phases actually work — and to track your own rhythm clearly in the months of preparation — The Women's Hormone Blueprint and The Aligned Woman Journal are gentle companions for getting to know your body. They are educational tools, not medical or fertility products.

About the author

Andreea Mighiu is a women's hormonal health educator and the founder of Zōē. She works alongside medical doctors to translate peer-reviewed research into clear, practical cycle education. She is an educator, not a physician — Zōē's content is designed to inform, not to replace personalised medical advice.

References

1. Nutrition During Pregnancy. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). acog.org
2. Prenatal vitamins: Why they matter, how to choose. Mayo Clinic, 2025. mayoclinic.org
3. Dietary Supplements and Life Stages: Pregnancy. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. ods.od.nih.gov
4. Evidence based recommendations for an optimal prenatal supplement for women in the US. PMC, 2022. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
5. Review on stress-induced menstrual disorders. 2025. pharmaceuticaljournal.net

This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. Preconception and pregnancy decisions, including supplementation, should be made with a qualified healthcare provider who knows your history.