04/27/2026
Ultrasounds are often treated like a required step in pregnancy care, but the reality is more nuanced than that.
They’re a medical tool—useful for gathering information about a pregnancy, checking growth, estimating gestational age, and looking for certain conditions. For many people, they can offer reassurance or help guide decisions when something needs closer monitoring.
At the same time, they aren’t mandatory in every situation, and they aren’t the only way to understand what’s happening in a pregnancy. Like any tool in healthcare, they come with context, limitations, and the need for informed choice.
What often gets lost is that this is something you get to decide on. It’s up to you whether you want to have an ultrasound, how many you want, and what feels right for your body and your pregnancy. That choice should be part of your care conversation, not something assumed for you.
You can ask what the scan is for. You can ask what information it’s meant to provide. You can ask what would change based on the results. And you can take time to decide if it feels aligned for you before moving forward.
Pregnancy care works best when you’re included in the decision-making, not just following a set path without space to question it.
Your body. Your pregnancy. Your choice.