7 Signs You've Already Ovulated
And What They Mean for Getting Pregnant
A clinician-reviewed guide to reading your body's ovulation signals — so you can time conception with confidence.
Reviewed by Dr. Larry Andrew · East Bay Fertility Center · Utah County
If you're trying to conceive, one of the most important things you can do is understand your own cycle — specifically, when you've ovulated. But ovulation is invisible. You can't see it happening. So how do you know it occurred?
The good news: your body sends clear signals — both before and after ovulation — if you know where to look. Dr. Larry Andrew, reproductive specialist at East Bay Fertility Center in Utah County, has helped thousands of patients decode these signals on their path to parenthood.
This guide covers 7 confirmed signs that ovulation has occurred, how to track them, and what to do if you're not seeing them consistently.
Understanding Ovulation: The Basics
Ovulation occurs when a mature egg is released from one of your ovaries, triggered by a surge in luteinizing hormone (LH). The egg then travels down the fallopian tube, where fertilization can occur — but only within a narrow window.
Here's a simplified view of how hormones shift across your cycle and when ovulation occurs:
Period
Ovulation ↑
Next period
Key Insight from Dr. Larry Andrew
"Most of the signs patients notice actually occur before ovulation — which is ideal for timing intercourse. But confirming ovulation happened requires looking at what changes after the egg is released. Progesterone is your best post-ovulation biomarker."
The 7 Signs You Have Ovulated
Basal Body Temperature (BBT) Rise
Your resting temperature rises 0.2–0.5°F after ovulation and stays elevated throughout your luteal phase.
LH Surge on OPK
A positive ovulation predictor kit means ovulation is likely 12–36 hours away — or just occurred.
Change in Cervical Mucus
Egg-white cervical mucus peaks at ovulation, then abruptly dries up afterward.
Mittelschmerz (Ovulation Pain)
A one-sided pelvic ache or sharp twinge lasting minutes to hours — felt by ~20% of women.
Breast Tenderness
Rising progesterone after ovulation often causes breast sensitivity or fullness in the days following.
Cervical Position Change
The cervix drops, firms up, and closes after ovulation — the opposite of its peak fertile state.
Light Spotting (Ovulation Bleeding)
A small amount of pinkish or brownish discharge around mid-cycle can signal the follicle has ruptured.
Sign #1: Basal Body Temperature (BBT) Shift
Your basal body temperature — taken immediately upon waking, before any movement — is one of the most reliable post-ovulation indicators available. After ovulation, progesterone causes a sustained temperature rise of 0.2 to 0.5°F (0.1–0.3°C) that persists for the rest of your luteal phase.
How to track it: Use a basal thermometer (measures to 0.1°F). Take your temperature at the same time every morning before getting out of bed. After 3 consecutive elevated readings, ovulation is confirmed for that cycle.
Limitation: BBT only confirms ovulation after it's already happened — it cannot predict it in advance.
Sign #2: Positive OPK (LH Surge)
Ovulation Predictor Kits (OPKs) detect the LH surge in your urine. A positive result means your body has initiated the ovulation process — the egg will be released within 12 to 36 hours. After ovulation occurs, LH levels fall rapidly and the test returns negative.
Digital OPKs with smiley faces are easiest to interpret. For more precision, quantitative OPKs (like Mira) track the actual LH concentration over time.
Sign #3: Cervical Mucus Changes
The texture and appearance of your cervical mucus shifts dramatically throughout your cycle, guided by estrogen and progesterone. The most fertile mucus — egg-white cervical mucus (EWCM) — appears just before ovulation. After ovulation, it dries up or becomes thick and white/cloudy.
| Cycle Phase | Mucus Appearance | Texture | Fertility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Menstruation (Day 1–5) | Blood / spotting | — | Not applicable |
| Early follicular (Day 6–9) | Dry or absent | None | Low |
| Pre-ovulatory (Day 10–12) | Sticky, white | Thick, opaque | Low–moderate |
| Peak fertile window (Day 13–14) | Clear, stretchy | Like raw egg white | ⭑ Peak Fertile |
| After ovulation (Day 15+) | Dries up; cloudy | Thick, crumbly | Low — cycle over |
Sign #4: Mittelschmerz — Ovulation Pain
Mittelschmerz (German for "middle pain") refers to the one-sided pelvic discomfort some women feel when the ovarian follicle ruptures and the egg is released. It typically presents as:
- A sharp, brief twinge on one side of the lower abdomen
- A dull ache lasting from a few minutes up to 48 hours
- Mild bloating or a feeling of pressure near the hip
- Occasional light spotting accompanying the pain
Not every woman experiences this, and its presence or absence is not a reliable indicator on its own. However, if you consistently feel it mid-cycle and can correlate it with your BBT or OPK data, it becomes a useful supporting sign.
Sign #5: Breast Tenderness
Post-ovulation progesterone causes many women to experience breast sensitivity, fullness, or tenderness in the days following ovulation. This is the same mechanism responsible for premenstrual breast discomfort — the difference is timing. If tenderness begins in the middle of your cycle (rather than in the week before your period), it can signal that ovulation has occurred and progesterone is rising.
Sign #6: Cervical Position
Throughout your cycle, your cervix changes position, texture, and openness. At ovulation, it is high, soft, and open (to allow sperm entry). After ovulation, it drops lower, firms up, and closes. Checking cervical position requires a consistent routine and clean hands — it's a useful confirmation tool for experienced trackers.
Sign #7: Mid-Cycle Spotting
A small amount of pinkish or brownish spotting around day 14 can occur when the follicle ruptures or when estrogen briefly drops just before ovulation. This is called ovulation bleeding and is completely normal. It's typically lighter and shorter than your period — just a few hours to a day.
When Spotting Is Not Normal
If you experience heavy mid-cycle bleeding, irregular spotting throughout the month, or spotting combined with pain, schedule a consultation. These can indicate conditions like PCOS, endometriosis, or polyps that affect fertility.
What If You're Not Seeing These Signs?
Some women have anovulatory cycles — cycles where no egg is released, even though menstruation still occurs. This is more common than most realize and is a leading cause of difficulty conceiving. Anovulation can result from:
- Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) — the most common cause
- Thyroid dysfunction (hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism)
- Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI)
- Hyperprolactinemia (elevated prolactin)
- Extreme weight changes, over-exercise, or chronic stress
- Luteal Phase Defect — ovulation occurs but progesterone is insufficient
How East Bay Fertility Confirms Ovulation Clinically
Rather than relying solely on home tracking, Dr. Larry Andrew uses mid-luteal serum progesterone testing (typically on Day 21 of a 28-day cycle), transvaginal ultrasound to visualize follicle development and confirm rupture, and follicular monitoring protocols. These tools provide certainty that home methods cannot.
Dr. Larry Andrew
Dr. Larry Andrew is a board-eligible fertility specialist and founder of East Bay Fertility and Hormone Therapy Center in Utah County. With over 30 years of clinical experience and a 83% IVF success rate, Dr. Andrew has helped thousands of Utah families build their families. He specializes in ovulation disorders, IUI, IVF, and hormone optimization.
Not Sure If You're Ovulating?
Our team at East Bay Fertility Center can confirm ovulation with a simple blood test — and design a personalized fertility plan to maximize your chances of conception.
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