If you have fibroids and are hoping to grow your family, one question tends to come up first: will they make it harder to get pregnant? It is a fair and common worry — and the reassuring reality is that many people with fibroids conceive without difficulty. What matters most is the type, size and location. Here is a calm, practical overview for anyone trying to conceive.
Do fibroids affect getting pregnant?
For many women, fibroids have little or no effect on conception. Whether they matter depends largely on where they sit and how big they are. Some fibroids may influence the uterine environment, while others sit quietly and cause no issues at all. Because every situation is different, imaging and a conversation with your doctor are the only way to know what applies to you. Our broader guide on fibroids and fertility covers the foundations in more depth.
Which fibroids matter most for conception
Fibroids are often described by their location. Those that grow into the uterine cavity (submucosal) are the ones most often discussed in relation to conception and implantation, because they can change the shape of the space where a pregnancy would develop. Fibroids on the outer wall or within the muscle frequently have less impact. This is general information, not a diagnosis — your provider can explain which type, if any, you have and what it means for you.
Fibroids during pregnancy
Many people with fibroids go on to have healthy pregnancies. Fibroids can change in size during pregnancy due to shifting hormones, and most cause no problems, though some may need monitoring. The key takeaway is that fibroids and pregnancy often coexist well, and your care team will keep an eye on anything that needs attention.
Preparing your body before conception
Whether or not fibroids are part of your picture, preparing your body is always worthwhile. A balanced diet, healthy weight, good sleep and managing stress all support reproductive wellness. Our preconception checklist is a simple, two-person place to start. Small, steady habits tend to matter more than any single dramatic change.
Working with your doctor — and gentle support
Fibroids and fertility are best navigated with a doctor who can assess your individual situation and timeline. Alongside that care, AGO's herbal-based products such as AGO Tumor and U Xo Herblux are designed to support uterine and reproductive wellness as part of a healthy lifestyle — a complement to medical guidance, never a substitute. If you would like to talk things through first, our team offers a free, no-pressure consultation.