What to Write in a Pregnancy Journal: 50 Prompts for Every Trimester
What to write in a pregnancy journal is the number one question expecting moms ask when they open a blank page. This guide gives you 50 pregnancy journal prompts organized by trimester — from the moment you see those two pink lines to the final days before you hold your baby. Each prompt is designed to capture the emotions, milestones, and everyday moments that fly by faster than you'd expect.
Whether you are 6 weeks pregnant and battling morning sickness or 36 weeks and nesting like your life depends on it, there is something here for you. Research from the American Pregnancy Association shows that journaling during pregnancy reduces stress, strengthens the bond with your baby, and creates a keepsake your family will treasure for decades. Let's make sure you don't miss a single memory.
Why a pregnancy journal matters more than you think
A pregnancy journal is far more than a diary. It's a time capsule of the most transformative experience of your life — one your future self and your child will want to revisit.
Journaling lowers stress and anxiety during pregnancy. Research published by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) found that expressive writing helps expectant mothers process complex emotions, from excitement to fear. When pregnancy hormones send your emotions on a rollercoaster, writing grounds you.
Beyond mental health, a pregnancy journal preserves details you think you'll remember but won't. The exact moment you felt the first kick. The ridiculous craving that hit at 2 a.m. The nickname your partner gave your baby bump. These tiny moments disappear from memory within months — unless you write them down.
A pregnancy diary also strengthens communication with your OB-GYN or midwife. Tracking symptoms, fetal movement, and how you're feeling week by week gives your healthcare provider a clearer picture at each prenatal appointment.
How to start a pregnancy journal even if you hate writing
Starting is the hardest part. Here is the secret: there are no rules. Your pregnancy journal entries can be three sentences or three pages. They can be messy, misspelled, tear-stained, or hilarious. What matters is that you start.
Choose your format. Some moms love a beautiful physical notebook. Others prefer a digital pregnancy journal on their phone or tablet — especially for middle-of-the-night thoughts. A guided pregnancy journal with pre-written prompts removes the guesswork entirely. The best format is whichever one you will actually use.
Set a simple routine. You don't need to write every day. Once a week — maybe Sunday evenings or after each prenatal visit — works perfectly. Pair journaling with something you already do, like your evening tea or bedtime routine, and it becomes effortless.
Start wherever you are. Eight weeks along? Thirty weeks? It doesn't matter. You can always backfill early memories later. The most important entry in your pregnancy diary is the one you write today.
If writing feels hard, try these approaches: voice-record your thoughts and transcribe them later, use fill-in-the-blank prompts, paste in ultrasound photos with a one-line caption, or simply jot down three words that describe your day. Now let's dive into the 50 pregnancy journal prompts that will carry you through every trimester.
First trimester pregnancy journal prompts (weeks 1–13)
The first trimester is a whirlwind of emotions — disbelief, joy, anxiety, exhaustion, and morning sickness that doesn't respect the clock. These pregnancy journal prompts for the first trimester help you process the enormous shift happening in your body and your life.
First Trimester Prompts
Weeks 1–13 · 15 Prompts · The BeginningWrite down every detail — where you were, what time it was, who you told first, and exactly how you felt in that moment. This is the entry you'll read to your child someday.
Did you cry? Scream? Stare in shock? Laugh? Call someone immediately? Sit in silence? Be honest — there is no right reaction.
Describe their faces, their words, the way the room felt. These details fade fast.
Write about the moment the doctor gave you that date. How did it feel to have a number on the calendar?
Morning sickness, fatigue, sore breasts, food aversions — document the physical reality of your first trimester.
This is one of the most entertaining entries to look back on. Be specific.
Tell them how tiny they are, what you're already dreaming for them, and how their existence has changed your world.
Naming your fears on paper takes away their power. Be raw. This pregnancy journal is for you.
New prenatal vitamins? Cutting out caffeine? Extra naps? Document the adjustments.
What did your OB-GYN or midwife say? How did it feel hearing your baby's heartbeat for the first time?
Start your running list early. Note why each name appeals to you — family significance, sound, meaning.
What conversations have you had? How has your relationship shifted since the pregnancy test?
If you could bottle one feeling from this trimester, what would it be?
The things no one warns you about — write those down in your pregnancy journal.
Even if it's just a tiny dot on the screen, this is the first picture of your baby. Write about what you saw and felt.
Second trimester pregnancy journal prompts (weeks 14–27)
Welcome to what many expecting mothers call the golden trimester. Energy returns, morning sickness often fades, and your baby bump starts making its debut. The second trimester is rich with milestones — from feeling the first kicks to finding out the gender. These pregnancy journal prompts will help you savor every moment.
Second Trimester Prompts
Weeks 14–27 · 20 Prompts · The Golden TrimesterCompare your energy, mood, and symptoms to the first trimester. Most moms feel a noticeable shift — document yours.
Was it a flutter? A bubble? A kick you weren't sure about? Where were you? This is one of the most magical pregnancy milestones to record in your pregnancy journal.
Describe it in words and pair this entry with a weekly bump photo. Note how your body is changing.
Whether it's a reveal party or a quiet ultrasound moment, capture every detail. If you're keeping it a surprise, write about why.
Has the list changed since the first trimester? Are you and your partner agreeing or debating?
What colors, themes, or vibes are you drawn to? Even if you haven't started yet, write about what you're imagining.
Track your cravings — they tell a hilarious story when you look back at your pregnancy diary.
At 20 weeks, your baby is the size of a banana. Tell them about the life they're coming into.
Parenthood starts before the baby arrives. What are you learning about each other?
A specific ultrasound image, a song that made you cry, a comment from a stranger — identify the moment that hit hardest.
Who's there? What gifts mean the most? What does it feel like to be celebrated?
Beyond the nursery — car seat installation, baby-proofing plans, clearing space.
Every pregnant woman gets unsolicited advice. Write down the gems and the groan-worthy ones.
Let yourself dream on paper in your pregnancy journal.
According to the NHS, up to 1 in 5 women experience mental health challenges during pregnancy. Use your journal as a safe space.
From the moment you wake up to the moment you fall asleep. Ordinary days become extraordinary memories.
This sounds small, but it's the kind of detail that triggers vivid memories years later.
Your baby can hear sounds starting around week 18. What's the soundtrack of their time in the womb?
Who has shown up for you? Who has surprised you?
Write something kind about what your body is doing right now. Growing a human is no small feat.
These prompts are just the beginning
The Pregnancy Week-by-Week Journal gives you unique guided prompts for each of the 40 weeks, plus everything you need to document your entire pregnancy journey.
- Guided prompts for all 40 weeks — never face a blank page
- Baby development tracker with weekly size comparisons
- Milestone pages for bump photos, cravings, and gender reveal
- Hospital bag checklist and birth plan template
- Compatible with GoodNotes, Notability, or print at home
Third trimester pregnancy journal prompts (weeks 28–40)
The final stretch. Your baby is fully formed and gaining weight, your body is working harder than ever, and the mix of anticipation and nervousness is intense. These third trimester pregnancy journal prompts help you process the countdown and prepare emotionally for birth and beyond.
Third Trimester Prompts
Weeks 28–40 · 15 Prompts · The Home StretchBraxton Hicks contractions, back pain, swollen feet, the inability to find a comfortable sleeping position — document the physical reality.
What are your preferences for labor and delivery? Pain management, who will be in the room, music, lighting. A birth plan template can guide you through every decision.
Or what still needs to go in? Making a list in your pregnancy journal doubles as practical preparation.
Excited? Terrified? Both? Write through the fear. Name it and it gets smaller.
This is the last letter you'll write while they're inside you. Tell them what you want them to know before they enter the world.
Close your eyes and picture it. Then write what you see.
Compare who you are now to who you were before that positive test. The transformation is worth documenting.
Write the life lessons, values, and truths you hope to teach them.
Are you organizing drawers at midnight? Washing tiny onesies? Rearranging furniture for the third time? The nesting instinct is powerful — and entertaining to read about later.
Sleep deprivation? Breastfeeding? Losing your identity? Be specific and honest.
Future-you will need encouragement. Write words of compassion, grace, and strength for the postpartum days ahead.
List the people you're counting on — partner, parents, friends, doula, midwife. Acknowledging your village matters.
The kicks that take your breath away, the belly that bumps into everything, the anticipation that keeps you awake.
Both are completely valid. Write it honestly in your pregnancy journal.
What kind of parent do you want to be? What kind of childhood do you envision? What traditions do you want to create? Dream big on paper.
Creative pregnancy journal ideas beyond prompts
Not every pregnancy journal entry needs to be written. Here are some creative pregnancy diary ideas that bring your journal to life in different ways.
Weekly bump photo timeline
Take a photo in the same spot each week. Paste or reference these in your pregnancy journal alongside your written entries. This visual progression becomes one of the most treasured parts of any pregnancy memory book.
Baby size comparisons
Each week your baby is roughly the size of a fruit — from a poppy seed at week 4 to a watermelon at week 40. Track these alongside your entries for a fun visual element.
Pregnancy playlist
Create a playlist of songs that define each trimester. Your baby can hear music from around 18 weeks — these songs become part of their story.
Cravings and aversions log
Keep a running list. It's one of the funniest things to look back on, and your child will love hearing about the bizarre midnight combinations.
Sketch and vision board pages
Rough sketches of your nursery layout, your baby bump, or the face you imagine. Tape in fabric swatches, paint chips, or magazine cutouts for a scrapbook feel.
For more pregnancy journaling ideas organized by each week of pregnancy, explore the week-by-week pregnancy guide.
Tips to keep your pregnancy diary going
The biggest challenge with pregnancy journaling is not starting — it is continuing. Here are practical strategies that work for busy, tired, and overwhelmed expecting moms who want to keep their pregnancy journal going strong.
A three-sentence entry counts. A single word that captures your mood counts. Perfection is the enemy of consistency. Your future self won't care about grammar — they'll care that you showed up.
When you're too exhausted to sit down with a physical journal, open your Notes app and type a few lines. Transfer them later — or don't. The point is capturing the moment.
Pick one day per week as your pregnancy journaling day. Sunday evenings work well — a natural moment to reflect on the week behind you.
Some weeks, a bump photo with a one-line caption is enough. Tape the ultrasound in. Snap a picture of the nursery progress. Visual entries are just as valuable as written ones.
If you miss a few weeks, don't stress about catching up. Just start again from today. A pregnancy journal with gaps is infinitely more valuable than a blank one.
FAQ: Your pregnancy journal questions answered
Start as soon as you find out you are pregnant — or even before, if you are trying to conceive. The earliest weeks are full of emotions and details that fade quickly. That said, it is never too late. Whether you are 8 weeks or 38 weeks, starting now means capturing everything from this point forward.
Once a week is the sweet spot for most moms. It's frequent enough to capture meaningful details without feeling like a chore. Some women prefer writing after each prenatal appointment or whenever something noteworthy happens.
That is exactly what prompts are for. Use the 50 prompts in this guide as a starting point, or invest in a guided pregnancy journal that provides a new prompt for every week. When even prompts feel hard, simply write three things: one thing you felt, one thing that happened, and one thing you're grateful for.
Both work beautifully. Physical journals feel more personal and become tangible keepsakes. Digital journals are convenient for on-the-go entries, photo integration, and backup safety. Many moms use a printable pregnancy journal PDF — you get the structure of a guided journal with the warmth of handwritten pages.
Absolutely. Dedicated partner entries add a dimension that is irreplaceable. Imagine your child reading their other parent's thoughts and feelings from before they were born. Even a short entry from your partner each trimester creates something deeply meaningful.
A pregnancy journal covers the nine months before birth — your experience carrying and growing your baby. A baby book typically starts at birth and tracks the child's milestones. Ideally, your pregnancy journal flows naturally into a baby book, creating a complete story. Read more about the best pregnancy journal options for 2026.
If you struggle with blank pages or want a structured keepsake, yes. A guided journal with weekly prompts, development trackers, and milestone pages removes the friction and creates a more complete document of your pregnancy. The Pregnancy Week-by-Week Journal was designed for exactly this purpose — week-specific prompts, a baby development tracker, hospital bag checklist, and birth plan template, all in one printable PDF for $8.99.
Start capturing your pregnancy story today
These 40 weeks will be over before you know it. The pregnancy symptoms you are living through right now, the baby kicks that wake you at midnight, the way your heart swells when you see that tiny face on the ultrasound screen — all of it deserves to be remembered.
You now have 50 pregnancy journal prompts to carry you through every trimester. You know what to write in a pregnancy journal, how to start, and why it matters. The only thing left is to pick up a pen — or open a fresh page — and begin.
Your future self will thank you. And someday, your child will read these words and know exactly how loved they were before they even arrived.
Your pregnancy deserves to be remembered
You've just discovered 50 ideas for what to write in a pregnancy journal. Now imagine having all of these — organized, beautifully designed, and ready to fill in — from the moment you see that positive test to the day you meet your baby.
- Guided prompts for all 40 weeks — never face a blank page
- Baby development tracker — poppy seed to watermelon
- Milestone pages for bump photos, cravings, and gender reveal
- Hospital bag checklist — so nothing gets forgotten
- Birth plan template — your preferences, beautifully organized
- Compatible with GoodNotes, Notability, or print at home
This article is for informational purposes and is not a substitute for medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider with questions about your pregnancy. Created by the Pregnancy WeekByWeek team — a certified prenatal wellness coach and mother of two, in collaboration with OB-GYN consultants.