Understanding The Phases Of Your Menstrual Cycle | Conceivable
✦ Cycle Health

Understanding The Phases Of Your Menstrual Cycle

If you’ve been tracking your cycles using a basal body temperature (BBT) chart, you’ve probably seen your temperature drop and rise throughout your menstrual cycle. These temperature changes signify important hormonal shifts. Understanding what's happening in each phase of your cycle can help you pinpoint fertility issues, and then start making a plan to correct them. Read more to learn how...

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Kirsten Karchmer
Conceivable · Reproductive Health
May 31, 2022
⏱ 6 min read

If you've been tracking your cycles using a basal body temperature (BBT) chart, you've probably seen your temperature drop and rise throughout your menstrual cycle. These temperature changes signify important hormonal shifts.

Understanding what's happening in each phase of your cycle can help you pinpoint fertility issues, and then start making a plan to correct them.

KEY INSIGHT

Your BBT chart is more than a temperature log — it's a window into your hormonal health. Each phase of your cycle leaves a distinct thermal fingerprint that can reveal follicular issues, poor ovulation timing, and luteal phase defects before they become bigger problems.

The First Half of Your Cycle: The Follicular Phase

Your BBT chart should begin the day your period starts. This is usually marked by a lower basal temperature, typically in the 97's. The day your period begins is the first day of what's called the follicular phase.

During this phase, the follicles in your ovary are maturing, a process controlled by follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). While each follicle contains an egg, only one of the follicles will become the "dominant follicle" and be released during ovulation.

The developing follicles produce estrogen at high rates. Your body knows it's time to ovulate once enough estrogen has been produced, signifying that the egg is ready to be released.

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Distinct hormonal phases make up every menstrual cycle — each one building on the last, and each one trackable through BBT charting

The Middle of Your Cycle: Ovulation

Luteinizing hormone (LH) begins to be released by your body as a result of the high levels of estrogen produced during the follicular phase. This surge in LH causes the egg to burst out of the follicle.

Ideally, ovulation will occur on day 14 of your cycle and will show up in your BBT chart as a rise in temperature.



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The Second Half of Your Cycle: The Luteal Phase

The luteal phase officially begins once ovulation occurs. Your temperatures will remain higher in this phase, normally in the 98's.

Leftover FSH and LH cause the dominant follicle to turn into the corpus luteum. The corpus luteum is very important in the luteal phase because it becomes the primary source of progesterone.

Progesterone thickens the uterine lining, readying your uterus for implantation. Without adequate progesterone, a pregnancy can't be sustained in its early days.

"Without adequate progesterone, a pregnancy can't be sustained in its early days."

Unless fertilization occurs and pregnancy hormones (hCG) are present, the corpus luteum will die within 14 days, causing progesterone levels to drop. Then your period will begin, starting the follicular phase all over again.

⚠️ IMPORTANT

A luteal phase shorter than 10 days — visible on your BBT chart as a shortened high-temperature window — can be a sign of low progesterone and may make it difficult to sustain early pregnancy. If you notice this pattern, it's worth discussing with a fertility specialist or tracking more closely with a tool like Conceivable.

Make an effort to understand these different phases of your cycle. Once you have a good grasp of what's going on with your body every month, you'll be able to predict ovulation successfully, pinpoint issues in your follicular or luteal phases, and be able to conceive more easily.

Whether you're a pro at BBT charting or completely new to the method, be sure to start tracking your temperatures each morning in a system like Conceivable.

Conceivable's integrative platform not only provides BBT tracking, but also offers sophisticated monitoring tools, proven formulations, and wellness plans to offer an evolved approach to conception. Prepare to be amazed at the amount of information you can learn by simply sticking a thermometer in your mouth each morning!

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a normal BBT temperature during the follicular phase?

During the follicular phase, basal body temperature typically falls in the 97°F range. After ovulation, temperatures shift upward into the 98°F range and remain elevated throughout the luteal phase. This sustained temperature rise — called the biphasic pattern — is one of the clearest signs that ovulation has occurred.

How long should each phase of the menstrual cycle last?

The follicular phase can vary widely — anywhere from 10 to 21 days — depending on how long it takes for the dominant follicle to mature. The luteal phase, however, is more consistent and typically lasts 12–14 days. A luteal phase shorter than 10 days may indicate a progesterone issue worth investigating.

What does it mean if ovulation doesn't happen on day 14?

Day 14 is an average, not a rule. Many people ovulate earlier or later depending on their cycle length and hormonal patterns. What matters most is that ovulation does occur and is followed by a healthy luteal phase. BBT charting over several months helps you identify your personal ovulation pattern.

How does the Conceivable system actually work?

Conceivable combines three things: personalized supplement packs built from your quiz results and health data, an AI care team of 7 specialists (led by Kai, your fertility coordinator) who adjust your protocol as your body changes, and the Halo Ring for continuous biometric tracking. The system is built on 240,000+ clinical data points and 20 years of practice. It starts at $15/month.

How do I know which supplements I actually need?

Take the free 2-minute Conceivable quiz. It analyzes your cycle patterns, energy, stress, digestion, and health history to identify the specific nutrients your body needs — not a generic prenatal, but a protocol built for exactly where you are right now.

Do I need the Halo Ring to use Conceivable?

No. The Halo Ring is optional and adds continuous tracking of BBT, HRV, sleep, and blood glucose — which Kai uses to fine-tune your protocol in real time. But the personalized supplement packs and AI care team work without it. The ring is a one-time $250 purchase with no subscription required.

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Written By
Kirsten Karchmer
Conceivable · Reproductive Health & Fertility

Kirsten has spent 25 years in reproductive medicine, working with tens of thousands of women on fertility, cycle health, and hormonal wellbeing. She founded Conceivable to put that clinical knowledge into everyone's hands.


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