Estimate your next period and fertile window, even with irregular cycles.
Works even when your cycles vary in length.
Pick the first day your most recent period started. This period start date anchors the calculation, even if your period cycles jump around. The period calculator for irregular periods needs at least one reference period to work from.
If your period cycle bounces between 25 and 35 days, find the middle (around 30 days). Count from the first day of one period to the first day of the next period, then average your last 3-4 period cycles. The calculator uses this estimate to predict when ovulation and your next period might happen.
The calculator shows your estimated next period date and fertile window. Since period cycles vary, treat these period predictions as ballpark dates. Track a few period cycles and adjust the average cycle length each time to improve period prediction accuracy. This menstrual calculator for irregular periods gets better with more period data.
See your fertile window and peak days to get pregnant.
See exactly which phase you're in today and what's coming next.
See your follicular phase dates, symptoms, and what to eat for optimal energy.
Calculate your monthly period cycle and predict your next period date in seconds.
Find your exact ovulation day and peak fertility window based on your cycle data.
Calculate your safe days and unsafe days based on your menstrual cycle.
Built to handle cycles that don't follow a set schedule.
Most period trackers assume a perfect 28-day period cycle. This period calculator for irregular periods works with any period cycle length. Enter your average period cycle, even if it changes month to month. The math adjusts to give you a reasonable period estimate, not a rigid period prediction.
Ovulation timing shifts when your period cycle length changes. This ovulation calculator for irregular periods estimates your fertile window based on your average period cycle. It flags the most likely fertile days around your period cycle, so you can plan around them. The fertile window is wider than for regular period cycles because precision drops when period patterns vary.
No account, no app download, no subscription. Enter your dates and the calculator runs immediately. Use it as many times as you need. Save your cycle length notes separately if you want to track patterns over time. This period calculator for irregular periods free tool stays simple on purpose.
Don't just guess your period cycle. Count the days from one period start to the next period for your last 3 periods. Add those period cycle numbers and divide by 3. If your period cycles were 27, 32, and 28 days, your average period cycle is 29. Update this period cycle number every few months as your period pattern shifts.
When ovulation timing bounces around in irregular period cycles, you can't pinpoint it to one or two days. The period calculator shows a 6-day window, but with irregular periods that fertile window becomes less certain. Consider the full week around predicted ovulation as potentially fertile if pregnancy timing matters for your period cycle.
One irregular period cycle might be stress or travel. Three irregular period cycles suggest a consistent period pattern. Log your period start dates for at least 4-6 months. You might find your period cycles cluster around certain lengths, or that external factors (diet, sleep, exercise) influence period timing.
This period calculator estimates based on period averages. If your period cycles vary by more than a week, period predictions lose precision. Use the predicted period dates as rough guides. For fertility tracking or conception planning around your period, combine this period calculator with ovulation predictor kits or basal temperature tracking for period confirmation.
A period calculator for irregular periods estimates your next period and fertile window using an average period cycle length. You track the number of days between period starts for several period cycles, find the average period cycle length, and enter that number. The period calculator counts forward from your last period start date and estimates ovulation around 12-16 days before your predicted next period. Because irregular period cycles shift, this period estimate is less precise than for regular period cycles. The period calculator shows a period range, not an exact period day. Update your average period cycle after each period to improve period accuracy over time. This period calculation method works best when period cycle length varies by less than 7-8 days.
Count from the first day of one period to the first day of the next period. Write down that period cycle number. Do this for 3-4 recent period cycles. Add those period cycle lengths together and divide by how many period cycles you tracked. For example: 26 days + 32 days + 29 days = 87 days. 87 ÷ 3 = 29 days average period cycle. Use that 29-day average when calculating your next expected period date. Your actual period cycle can still vary, but the average period cycle gives you a baseline. Recalculate the average period cycle every few months as new period cycles complete. If your period cycle lengths jump by more than a week regularly, talk to a doctor about underlying period causes.
Yes, but with lower confidence. An ovulation calculator for irregular periods estimates when you might ovulate based on your average cycle length. Ovulation typically happens 12-16 days before your next period. If your cycle averages 30 days, ovulation is estimated around day 14-18. But when cycles vary, ovulation timing shifts too. A 26-day cycle might ovulate on day 10-14, while a 34-day cycle might ovulate on day 18-22. The calculator shows your most likely fertile window, but you need backup methods like ovulation predictor test strips or cervical mucus tracking to confirm the actual ovulation day each cycle. Combine tools for better results.
Pregnancy dating is harder with irregular periods because ovulation timing is uncertain. Doctors typically calculate due dates from your last menstrual period (LMP) and assume a 28-day cycle with ovulation on day 14. If your cycles vary, that assumption is often wrong. An early ultrasound (around 8-12 weeks) measures embryo size and gives a more accurate due date. Ultrasound dating is considered the gold standard when cycles are unpredictable. If you know the exact ovulation or conception date, add 266 days (38 weeks) for a due date. Use an [ovulation calculator](/ovulation-calculator/) to estimate conception timing if you tracked your cycle.
Mark the first day of bleeding on a calendar or in a tracking app. Note when bleeding stops. Count how many days pass until your next period starts. Repeat for at least 3-4 cycles to find patterns. Look for cycle length averages, shortest and longest cycles, and any symptoms that cluster at certain times (cramps, mood changes, spotting). Some people also track basal body temperature, which rises slightly after ovulation, or cervical mucus changes throughout the cycle. This data helps you estimate fertile windows and notice when something shifts. A [period calculator](/period-calculator/) page can log these dates for you and calculate averages automatically.
The calendar method (rhythm method) for avoiding pregnancy relies on predictable cycles. With irregular periods, identifying truly safe days is difficult and unreliable. You'd need to assume your shortest cycle for the earliest possible ovulation and your longest cycle for the latest ovulation, then avoid sex during that entire span. For example, if your cycles range from 24 to 35 days, you'd potentially be fertile from day 6 to day 23—most of the month. Ovulation predictor kits and fertility awareness methods (tracking temperature and mucus) give better real-time signals. If avoiding pregnancy is the goal, barrier methods or hormonal contraception are more dependable with irregular cycles.
Common causes include stress, significant weight changes, intense exercise, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), thyroid disorders, perimenopause, breastfeeding, and some medications. Irregular periods are also normal during the first few years after your first period and in the years leading up to menopause. If your periods suddenly become irregular after being regular, or if cycles vary by more than a week consistently, see a doctor. Blood tests can check hormone levels. Treatment depends on the underlying cause. Sometimes lifestyle changes help, other times medication is needed. Track your cycles with a menstrual calculator for irregular periods so you have data to share during your appointment.
A 35-day cycle is longer than average but not necessarily irregular if it happens consistently. Normal cycle length ranges from 21 to 35 days. If your cycle is always around 35 days, that's your regular pattern. Irregularity means cycle length varies significantly from month to month. For example, one cycle is 26 days, the next is 38 days, then 30 days. That unpredictability is irregular. If you have a consistent 35-day cycle, you can use a standard [period calculator](/period-calculator/) and just enter 35 as your cycle length. The calculator will predict your next period and [fertility window](/fertility-calculator/) based on that rhythm.
Irregular periods can make conception harder because ovulation timing is unpredictable. If you don't know when you ovulate, timing sex for the fertile window becomes guesswork. Some causes of irregular periods, like PCOS or thyroid issues, also directly affect fertility. Other times, irregular cycles still include regular ovulation—it just happens at different times each month. Ovulation predictor kits, basal body temperature tracking, and monitoring cervical mucus help identify fertile days in real time. If you've been trying to conceive for 6-12 months without success and have irregular cycles, consult a fertility specialist. They can run tests and suggest treatments to regulate cycles or support ovulation.
See a doctor if your periods suddenly become irregular after being regular, if you go more than 3 months without a period, if bleeding is very heavy or lasts longer than 7 days, or if you have severe pain. Also consult a doctor if you're trying to conceive and irregular cycles are making timing difficult. Medical evaluation can identify underlying conditions like PCOS, thyroid disorders, or hormonal imbalances. Bring cycle tracking data with you—dates, lengths, symptoms. A menstrual cycle calculator for irregular periods helps you document patterns. Treatment depends on the cause and might include lifestyle changes, medication to regulate cycles, or fertility support if you're trying to get pregnant.
This calculator provides estimates only. Not for medical use. Consult your doctor for personal advice.
This calculator gives you a one-time estimate. For continuous tracking, cycle history, and reminders before your next period and fertile days, try the full tracker. Free, private, no signup required to explore.
Try Full Period & Ovulation Tracker