Pregnancy5 min read

35 weeks pregnant: weekly OB visits begin

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Quick answer: Week 35: What is checked each visit, cervical checks explained, strep B results, GBS recap.

Week 35 — you’re in the third trimester, the final stretch. Your baby is gaining weight rapidly, your body is working harder than ever, and the finish line is in sight. It’s completely normal to feel a mix of excitement, anxiety, and ‘let’s just get this done.’

Baby Development This Week

At week 35, your baby is approximately the size of a honeydew melon — measuring around 18.2 in / 46.2cm. Baby is running out of room and movements feel different now. Growth and final organ maturation are the priorities now. Your baby gains approximately half a pound per week from week 28 onward, laying down the fat deposits that will regulate body temperature after birth.

Symptoms You May Feel

Third trimester week 35 commonly brings: shortness of breath as the uterus presses against the diaphragm (improves when baby drops lower, usually weeks 36–38 for first pregnancies), heartburn at its peak as the stomach is compressed, frequent urination returning with a vengeance, swollen ankles and feet from fluid retention and venous compression, pelvic pressure and occasional ‘lightning crotch’ (sharp nerve pain), Braxton Hicks becoming more frequent and sometimes intense, carpal tunnel syndrome from fluid pressing on wrist nerves, and sleep disruption from physical discomfort and frequent waking.

What is checked each visit, cervical checks explained, strep B results, GBS recap

Weekly OB visits from 36 weeks include: blood pressure monitoring, urine dipstick for protein, fundal height measurement (centimeters typically equal weeks of gestation), fetal position check, and increasingly from week 36–37: Group B Strep swab, cervical exam if requested (to assess for ripening/dilation/effacement — note this is optional and does not predict when labor will begin). Fetal heart rate monitoring (NST) is added if there are risk factors. From week 39 onward, most OBs discuss induction timing — evidence supports elective induction at 39–40 weeks as having equivalent or better outcomes compared to expectant management for low-risk pregnancies.

How do I know if I’m in labor at week 35?

At 35 weeks you’re in late preterm territory — labor will not typically be stopped unless there’s a specific medical reason, because outcomes at 35 weeks are generally good. Signs of labor: regular contractions (every 5–10 minutes), rupture of membranes (a gush or steady trickle of fluid), loss of mucus plug, bloody show, or persistent lower back pain with contractions. Call your OB and proceed to the hospital. If your membranes rupture without contractions, go to the hospital regardless.

Practical Tips for Week 35

  • Sleep on your left side — it optimizes blood flow to the placenta and reduces vena cava compression.
  • Start kick counts from week 28 — 10 movements in 2 hours is the standard guideline; call your provider if concerned.
  • Pack your hospital bag by week 35 — babies don’t always wait until their due date.
  • Practice perineal massage from week 34 to reduce tearing risk at birth.
  • Attend all prenatal appointments — monitoring frequency increases in the third trimester for good reason.
  • Discuss your birth preferences with your provider before week 36.
  • 34 weeks pregnant: preeclampsia warning signs
  • 36 weeks pregnant: what early labor actually feels like

When to Call Your Midwife or OB

In the third trimester, call your provider immediately for: fewer than 10 fetal movements in 2 hours, regular painful contractions before 37 weeks, severe persistent headache with visual changes or facial swelling (preeclampsia warning signs), any bleeding, signs of water breaking, or any gut feeling that something isn’t right. From week 35, always err on the side of calling — your team would always rather you check in unnecessarily than miss something important.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I’m in labor?

True labor contractions are regular, progressively stronger, longer, and closer together — and they don’t stop with rest, hydration, or position changes (unlike Braxton Hicks). They typically start every 10–15 minutes and intensify over hours. Other labor signs include: bloody show (pink-tinged mucus from the cervical plug), your water breaking, and lower back pain that radiates to the front. The 5-1-1 rule for hospital: contractions every 5 minutes, lasting 1 minute, for 1 hour.

Is extreme fatigue normal at week 35?

Absolutely. Third trimester fatigue combines extra physical weight, disrupted sleep, frequent urination, and the enormous metabolic cost of a baby gaining half a pound weekly. Your cardiac output is 30–50% above baseline, your kidneys filter 50% more blood, and your body produces extra blood, hormones, and nutrients continuously. Rest is not laziness at this stage — it is medically appropriate preparation.

What is the mucus plug and when does it come out?

The mucus plug is a thick collection of cervical mucus that seals the cervix throughout pregnancy to protect against infection. It can come out days or even weeks before labor, or during early labor itself. It may be clear, white, yellow, or tinged with pink or brown blood. Losing it doesn’t mean labor is imminent, but it does mean your cervix is beginning to prepare. Any bright red bleeding should always be reported to your provider.

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Medical context only

This content supports decision-making but does not replace advice from your GP, midwife, health visitor or paediatric clinician.