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Sweating During Pregnancy: What's Normal and What to Do About It

Sweating increases during pregnancy for real physiological reasons. Here's what's happening, when it peaks, and what's safe to use while pregnant.

By sweat.sucks Editorial Team · 7 min read· Last reviewed March 17, 2026
Medically reviewed by Priya Patel, MPH , Hawaii Medical Journal

Pregnancy comes with a long list of things nobody warned you about, and somewhere on that list is the sweating. Not the glow that gets described in pregnancy books. The actual, waking up soaked, needing to change your shirt twice before noon, wondering if this is just you situation.

It’s not just you. Sweating significantly increases during pregnancy for real, measurable physiological reasons. It’s one of the most commonly reported pregnancy symptoms that rarely gets discussed directly. Here’s what’s happening and what you can actually do about it.

Why Pregnancy Causes More Sweating

Several biological changes during pregnancy work together to increase sweating:

Increased Blood Volume

Blood volume increases by up to 50 percent during pregnancy, a dramatic change that begins around 6 to 8 weeks and peaks in the third trimester. This increased blood volume raises cardiac output (the heart pumps more blood per minute), which generates more body heat. More heat means more sweating.

The expanded blood volume also affects how heat is dissipated: more blood is circulating near the skin surface, transferring core heat outward and priming the sweat response.

Elevated Metabolic Rate

Pregnancy increases basal metabolic rate by roughly 15 to 20 percent over the course of the pregnancy. You’re growing a person, which requires significant energy expenditure. That metabolic work generates heat. Your body’s primary way of managing excess heat is sweating.

By the third trimester, the fetus itself is generating body heat that contributes to your total thermal load.

Hormonal Changes

The massive hormonal changes of pregnancy, particularly elevated estrogen and progesterone, directly affect the hypothalamic thermostat. The thermostat’s neutral zone shifts, making you more sensitive to temperature changes and more likely to respond with sweating at lower temperature thresholds.

Progesterone in particular raises the baseline body temperature in pregnancy (the same effect that makes basal body temperature rise after ovulation). Running slightly warmer means the sweating threshold is reached more easily.

Weight Gain

The physical work of carrying additional weight generates heat. The added insulation of expanded tissue also makes cooling slightly less efficient. Both factors contribute to increased sweating, particularly during movement.

Hormonal Surges in the First Trimester

The first trimester involves some of the most dramatic hormonal changes: HCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) rises rapidly from implantation through about week 10 to 12, reaching its peak. The hormonal environment of early pregnancy can cause flushing, sweating, and heat sensitivity specifically during this phase, even before weight gain and blood volume increases are significant.

When Sweating Is Worst

There are two common peaks:

First trimester: Hormonal surges, elevated HCG, and a recalibrated thermostat make many women noticeably hotter and sweatier during the first 12 weeks. This can coincide with nausea and fatigue in a way that makes the first trimester feel particularly overwhelming.

Third trimester: Maximum blood volume, highest metabolic rate, fetal heat production, and peak body weight combine to make the third trimester the other common peak for sweating. In summer pregnancies, the third trimester sweating can be significant.

Night sweats occur throughout pregnancy, particularly in the first and third trimesters. The combination of hormonal effects on the thermostat and the physical changes in blood volume makes nighttime sweating common.

Managing Sweating During Pregnancy

The priority during pregnancy is using approaches that are safe for you and the baby. This means the more aggressive medical treatments for hyperhidrosis (prescription medications, iontophoresis) are generally deferred until after pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Antiperspirant: Generally Considered Safe

Clinical-strength aluminum-based antiperspirant is the standard management tool and is generally considered safe for use during pregnancy. No conclusive evidence links aluminum-based antiperspirant compounds to adverse pregnancy outcomes. Major obstetric guidelines and mainstream dermatology guidance support its use.

If you’re uncertain or have specific concerns, ask your OB or midwife. But “my doctor said to avoid all aluminum exposure” is not the current evidence-based recommendation.

What to avoid during pregnancy regarding sweating treatment:

  • Prescription-strength topical antiperspirant (Drysol, Hypercare), the higher concentrations aren’t specifically studied in pregnancy, and there’s no strong reason to use them when clinical OTC strength is available
  • Oral anticholinergic medications (glycopyrrolate, oxybutynin), these are systemic medications with effects throughout the body, and they’re not studied for pregnancy safety
  • Botox injections for sweating, botulinum toxin is contraindicated in pregnancy
  • Iontophoresis, not specifically studied in pregnancy; most practitioners defer it as a precaution

Clothing and Fabric

Moisture-wicking fabrics are more valuable during pregnancy sweating than ever. Natural fibers (cotton, bamboo, linen) and synthetic moisture-wicking blends pull sweat away from the skin and allow evaporation better than non-breathable fabrics.

Loose-fitting clothing allows more airflow than form-fitting pieces. In late pregnancy especially, anything that compresses or adds layers close to the body adds heat.

Moisture-wicking maternity clothes specifically engineered for comfort exist, though they’re not strictly necessary if you have loose, breathable options available.

Environmental Cooling

Staying cool is the most direct way to reduce the thermal trigger for sweating:

  • Air conditioning in the bedroom, particularly important for sleep
  • A fan directed at your face and body at night
  • Cool showers (not ice cold, just comfortably cool)
  • Staying out of direct heat and sun during the hottest parts of the day
  • Cooling towelettes for discreet relief away from home

The bedroom environment matters especially for night sweats. Keep the room cool (low to mid 60s°F / 15 to 18°C), use breathable cotton bedding, and consider a cooling mattress pad if night sweats are significantly disrupting sleep.

Hydration

Staying well-hydrated helps with thermoregulation and ensures that when you do sweat, the sweat is dilute (less concentrated salt and waste products). Dehydration makes thermoregulation less efficient and can make you feel worse in heat.

The recommendation for increased fluid intake during pregnancy (roughly 10 cups / 2.4 liters daily) is more important when sweating heavily.

Postpartum Sweating: Why It Gets Worse First

One of the more startling postpartum experiences for many women is that sweating gets worse initially after delivery, not better.

This is normal and has a straightforward explanation. During pregnancy, blood volume expanded by up to 50 percent. After delivery, the body needs to return to its pre-pregnancy fluid balance. It does this primarily through:

  • Increased urination (diuresis) in the first 2 to 5 days postpartum
  • Increased sweating, particularly at night, for the first 2 to 4 weeks

Postpartum night sweats are often more intense than anything experienced during the pregnancy itself. This is the body eliminating extra fluid, not a sign that something is wrong.

Breastfeeding also involves prolactin (the milk-producing hormone), which suppresses estrogen. Sustained low estrogen during breastfeeding can cause hot flash-like symptoms similar to perimenopause, including sweating and heat sensitivity.

Postpartum sweating typically resolves significantly within 4 to 6 weeks as fluid balance normalizes and hormone levels begin to stabilize. If severe sweating persists well beyond this window, or if it’s accompanied by other concerning symptoms (fever, significant mood changes, difficulty bonding), mention it at the postpartum appointment.

When to Call Your Doctor

Most pregnancy sweating is normal and expected. A call to your OB or midwife is appropriate if:

Sweating is accompanied by fever. Fever in pregnancy always warrants prompt contact with your provider. Sweating with fever suggests infection, which needs evaluation.

Night sweats come with other systemic symptoms. Significant weight loss, enlarged lymph nodes, prolonged fatigue, or other concerning systemic symptoms alongside night sweats warrant evaluation to rule out less common causes.

Sweating is localized in an unusual pattern. Normal pregnancy sweating tends to be generalized (particularly on the torso, face, and neck). Unusual patterns or very localized sweating that doesn’t fit the normal picture is worth mentioning.

You had pre-existing hyperhidrosis that is now significantly worse. Pregnancy can worsen pre-existing hyperhidrosis. Your OB should know if this is part of your history, both to help manage it safely and to ensure it’s factored into your care plan.

Causes of Excessive Sweating: Why You Sweat More Than Normal

Night Sweats: What They Mean and What to Do

The sweating of pregnancy is temporary, even when it doesn’t feel like it. The body returns to baseline fluid balance and hormonal regulation after delivery and breastfeeding. In the meantime, clinical antiperspirant, breathable fabric, and a consistently cool sleep environment go a long way.

Sources

  1. Sweating during pregnancy, MedlinePlus
  2. Pregnancy: Body changes and discomforts, Mayo Clinic
  3. Postpartum care: After a vaginal delivery, Mayo Clinic
  4. Changes in the body during pregnancy, MedlinePlus

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal to sweat a lot during pregnancy?

Yes. Increased sweating during pregnancy is normal and expected due to hormonal changes, increased blood volume, elevated metabolic rate, and weight gain. It's one of the most common complaints in the first and third trimesters.

When is sweating worst during pregnancy?

Many women experience the most intense sweating in the first trimester (due to hormonal surges) and the third trimester (due to maximum body weight, blood volume, and fetal heat production). Night sweats can occur throughout pregnancy.

Is it safe to use antiperspirant while pregnant?

Clinical-strength antiperspirant is generally considered safe during pregnancy. There is no conclusive evidence linking aluminum-based antiperspirants to harm in pregnancy. Avoid prescription treatments and more aggressive options. Talk to your OB if uncertain.

Why do you sweat more after giving birth?

Postpartum sweating is the body eliminating the extra fluid retained during pregnancy. Blood volume increases by up to 50% during pregnancy, and after delivery, the kidneys and sweat glands work to excrete the excess. This is normal and typically resolves within a few weeks.

What are safe ways to manage sweating during pregnancy?

Clinical-strength antiperspirant, moisture-wicking clothing, staying cool (fans, air conditioning, cool showers), staying well-hydrated, and avoiding heat. Prescription treatments and iontophoresis are generally deferred until after pregnancy and breastfeeding.

When should sweating during pregnancy be a concern?

Sweating accompanied by fever (possible infection), night sweats with significant weight loss or other systemic symptoms, or excessive sweating that seems unrelated to normal pregnancy changes warrants a call to your OB.

Medical Disclaimer: The content on sweat.sucks is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider.