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When most people start thinking about having a baby, the first piece of advice they hear is, “Start taking a prenatal vitamin.” Getting serious about supplements to support fertility is undeniably an essential first step. However, something else often gets lost in the conversation: a prenatal vitamin is just a starting point. There’s a whole world of lifestyle choices, environmental factors, and health considerations that can work alongside that daily supplement to potentially improve yours and your baby’s health from the very beginning.
Preconception health isn’t just about checking a box and swallowing a pill each morning. The goal is more about creating the healthiest possible environment for conception and early fetal development, and that responsibility extends to both partners.
Let’s take a closer look at what preconception wellness really looks like.
Prenatal vitamins deserve credit for what they do well: they fill nutritional gaps and provide essential nutrients that support fertility and early fetal development. But not all prenatals are created equal, and understanding what to look for can make a meaningful difference.
Here are the key nutrients you should prioritize.
A few things worth paying attention to:
When you’re comparing brands, flip the bottle over and look at the actual nutrient forms, as that’s where the real differences show up with many brands. Remember: even the highest-quality prenatal is meant to supplement a healthy lifestyle, not replace one.
Your daily habits around food, movement, and rest aren’t just “nice to haves.” They actually directly influence your reproductive health. Here’s how to optimize each area.
Think of your diet as the foundation everything else is built on. Nutrient-dense whole foods give your body the raw materials it needs to produce healthy eggs and sperm and eventually to grow a baby. Load up on colorful fruits and vegetables, lean proteins, healthy fats (avocado, olive oil, nuts), and complex carbs. Scale back on processed foods, refined sugar, and excessive caffeine. There’s a growing body of research suggesting that a Mediterranean-style eating pattern rich in antioxidants and anti-inflammatory foods may be particularly supportive of fertility.
Lastly, be sure to drink your water. Every cellular process in your body, including reproduction, depends on it.
Regular moderate exercise is a fertility ally. It helps maintain a healthy weight, lowers stress hormones, and improves circulation to your reproductive organs.
The keyword here is moderate. Intense, grueling workouts can actually backfire by throwing hormones important for fertility support totally out of balance. Instead, think brisk walks, swimming, yoga, or strength training a few times a week. If you’re starting from the couch, ease in so you don’t inadvertently drive up stress hormones that can impede reproductive processes. If you’re training like an elite athlete before preparing for conception, consider dialing it back a notch during your conception window.
Sleep is when your body does its most important repair work, including regulating the reproductive hormones that drive ovulation and sperm production. Skimping on sleep has been linked to irregular cycles, decreased fertility in women, and reduced sperm quality in men. Aim for seven to nine hours a night. Keep a consistent schedule, cut the screens before bed, and make your room cool and dark. It sounds simple, but striving for quality sleep is one of the most impactful changes you can make.
Here’s an important truth that often gets sidelined: sperm health accounts for half of the fertility equation. Yet most preconception advice is directed solely at women. If you’re trying to conceive as a couple, both partners should be investing in their health.
Sperm takes approximately 74 days to fully develop, which means the lifestyle choices a male partner makes today will affect sperm quality two to three months from now.
There’s interesting research on whether men should take folic acid to support fertility. A 2002 study looked at men, both fertile and subfertile, who took folic acid combined with zinc daily for six months. The subfertile group experienced a 74 percent increase in sperm count. More research is needed, but it’s a promising signal that male supplementation can play a real role.
Beyond supplements, the playbook looks very similar for men as it does for women: eat well (lots of antioxidant-rich foods), exercise regularly, sleep enough, limit alcohol, skip tobacco and recreational drugs, and maintain a healthy weight. One often-missed tip for men to support sperm quality is that heat exposure matters. Excessive time in hot tubs, saunas, or even with a laptop parked on your lap can temporarily reduce sperm quality.
Beyond the pillars of diet, exercise, and sleep, a few lesser-known factors are worth your attention.
Vitamin D does far more than support your bones. This vitamin is deeply involved in reproductive function for both partners. In women, vitamin D receptors exist throughout the reproductive tract, and healthy levels have been linked to better fertility outcomes. In men, it supports testosterone production and sperm quality.
The problem? A lot of people are deficient, especially if you work indoors or live somewhere that doesn’t get much sun year-round. While supplementation helps, your body produces vitamin D most efficiently from direct sunlight. Try for 15–20 minutes of midday sun a few times a week, and ask your doctor to check your levels so you know where you stand.
Chronic stress keeps cortisol levels elevated, which can directly interfere with reproductive hormones. In women, high cortisol can disrupt the delicate hormonal cascade needed for ovulation. In men, it can reduce testosterone and impair sperm production.
While eliminating stress entirely isn’t realistic, building regular stress-management practices into your routine can help. Consider meditation, deep breathing exercises, gentle yoga, time in nature, or whatever activities help you decompress. Prioritizing relaxation isn’t self-indulgent.
Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that mess with your hormonal system, and they’re hiding in more places than you’d expect: certain plastics, pesticides, personal care products, and household cleaners. Some simple swaps that help both partners: use glass or stainless steel containers instead of plastic, switch to natural cleaning products, choose personal care items without parabens or phthalates, and buy organic produce when it’s practical.
Preconception is an ideal time to establish a relationship with your healthcare provider and address any questions or concerns proactively.
Talk through your medical history, any medications you’re currently taking, and your family health history. Your provider can help you understand how existing conditions might affect your path to pregnancy.
Both partners can benefit from baseline bloodwork. For women, that might include thyroid function, hormone panels, and immunity checks for things like rubella. For men, a semen analysis provides valuable information that’s easy to obtain. Additionally, it is also worth asking about genetic carrier screening, as it can reveal whether either partner carries genes for certain heritable conditions before you conceive.
The general guidance: if you’re under 35 and have been trying for a year, or over 35 and trying for six months, it’s time to consult a fertility specialist. If you have a known condition like PCOS, endometriosis, or irregular cycles, loop in a fertility specialist sooner so you have more time to explore your options.
Every couple’s path to parenthood looks different, and there’s no single checklist that works for everyone. But by taking a whole-picture approach to preconception health that goes well beyond that daily vitamin, you’re setting yourself up for the strongest possible start.
At the Fertility Center, we specialize in helping couples understand their reproductive health and map out a plan that makes sense for their situation. Whether you’re just starting to think about trying or you’ve been at it for a while and want some guidance, a preconception consultation is a great first step. Our team in Chattanooga and Knoxville would love to hear from you. Schedule a consultation to get started.