Quick answer: Week 25: Why left side matters, pillow types, restless legs, heartburn at night.
Week 25 puts you in the second trimester — often called the golden period of pregnancy, and for good reason. Energy typically improves, nausea subsides, and the pregnancy becomes physically and emotionally more comfortable for most women.
Baby Development This Week
At week 25, your baby is approximately the size of a cauliflower head — measuring around 13.6 in / 34.6cm. Baby is gaining fat steadily and the brain is developing rapidly. All organs are now formed and the focus has shifted entirely to growth and maturation. Your baby is increasingly responsive to sound, light, and touch.
Symptoms You May Feel
Common week 25 second trimester symptoms include: round ligament pain (sharp, brief twinges on the sides of your abdomen as the uterus grows rapidly), Braxton Hicks contractions (occasional irregular tightening — harmless practice contractions), back pain as your center of gravity shifts forward, nasal congestion from increased blood volume, skin changes including the linea nigra (dark line down the abdomen) and possible chloasma (facial darkening), and for many women, a welcome increase in energy and libido compared to the first trimester.
Why left side matters, pillow types, restless legs, heartburn at night
Sleeping on the left side from approximately 24–28 weeks is recommended because the uterus puts pressure on the inferior vena cava (the large vein returning blood from the lower body to the heart) when lying on the back. Left-side sleeping improves blood flow to the placenta and reduces this compression. A pregnancy pillow helps maintain position and supports the growing bump. Restless legs syndrome affects approximately 25% of pregnant women, peaking in the third trimester, and is linked to iron and folate deficiency — discuss with your OB if symptoms are disruptive. Heartburn at night worsens throughout pregnancy as progesterone relaxes the lower esophageal sphincter; elevation of the head of the bed and eating earlier in the evening helps.
When should I feel the baby move at week 25?
Week 25 movement should be well-established — you know your baby’s patterns. From this point, you should contact your OB if you notice a significant reduction in your baby’s normal movement pattern. The fetus at 25 weeks weighs approximately 660g and is developing lung surfactant — the substance that will allow air sacs to remain open after birth. Preterm labor awareness matters from week 25+: contractions occurring regularly (every 10 minutes or more frequently), pelvic pressure, lower backache, or watery discharge should prompt a call to your OB.
Practical Tips for Week 25
- Start pelvic floor exercises (Kegels) now — 3 sets of 10-second holds, 3 times daily pays dividends postpartum.
- Consider a pregnancy pillow as your bump grows — better sleep protects energy and mood.
- Book prenatal/childbirth classes early — good ones fill up months in advance.
- Continue prenatal vitamins and increase iron-rich foods as blood volume expands significantly.
- Walk 30 minutes daily — the evidence for maternal and fetal benefits is consistent and strong.
- Begin researching your birth plan options and discussing preferences with your provider.
When to Call Your Midwife or OB
Contact your provider for: regular contractions before 37 weeks (more than 4 per hour), decreased fetal movement, severe headache with visual changes, sudden swelling of the face or hands, any bleeding, or fever above 101°F / 38.3°C. Trust your instincts — if something feels different or wrong, call.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I feel the baby move at week 25?
First movements (quickening) are typically felt between weeks 16–25. First-time mothers usually notice them later than those who’ve been pregnant before. Early movements feel like flutters, bubbles, or light taps — easily confused with gas. They become unmistakable kicks and rolls as the weeks progress. If you have an anterior placenta (at the front of the uterus), it cushions movement and you may feel it later than expected.
Is lower back pain normal in the second trimester?
Very much so — it affects around 50% of pregnant women. Your growing uterus shifts your center of gravity forward, your ligaments loosen from relaxin, and your posture compensates in ways that strain the lumbar spine. Prenatal yoga, swimming, a maternity support belt, and sleeping with a pillow between your knees all provide significant relief. If pain is severe, radiates down the leg, or is accompanied by numbness or tingling, mention it to your provider.
When should I start buying baby gear?
Week 25 is a reasonable time to start researching — particularly big-ticket items like strollers, car seats, and cribs that may need to be ordered months in advance. Most parents wait until after the 20-week anatomy scan (when risk drops significantly) before major purchases. Baby showers are typically held in the third trimester, so let that guide the timing of purchases you expect as gifts.
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Related Reading
- 20 weeks pregnant: halfway there – anatomy scan guide
- Best pregnancy pillows 2025: C-shape vs U-shape compared
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