Set week 22 in the app for your tracker, diary prompt, and the second trimester lesson — free, always.
Open app — it's freeThe facial expressions forming last week continue — but this week there is something more to the face itself: eyebrows and eyelashes are now fully formed, and the lips are completely developed. The visual detail these features add is significant. A foetus at 22 weeks, seen on a good quality ultrasound, is beginning to look unmistakably like a newborn — the proportions, the features, the particular character of this specific face.
The movements are now a daily rhythm. The foetus at 22 weeks is active for periods of up to 40 minutes and quiet for comparable periods — a sleep-wake cycle that is already established and will deepen and become more readable over the coming weeks. The kicks, rolls, and stretches are strong enough to be felt reliably from the outside of the abdomen, and partners who haven't yet felt movement may begin to do so this week. The sensation felt from outside — a distinct, unmistakable push against the hand — is qualitatively different from the flutter experienced internally and often lands with particular force for partners.
My partner finally felt the baby kick at twenty-two weeks. We'd been trying for weeks — lying there with their hand on my bump, waiting. And then it happened. They went completely still. They didn't say anything for a moment. Then they said "oh" — just that — and I knew they were in. Completely in.
Sleep deserves its own section from week 22, because this is typically when it begins to become genuinely difficult — not just uncomfortable, but disruptive enough to affect daily functioning. Understanding why helps, and knowing what actually makes a difference is more useful than general reassurance that it will improve eventually.
Sleep difficulty in pregnancy is normal, common, and manageable. It is also, genuinely, preparation — the interrupted sleep of the early weeks with a newborn is not entirely different from this, and the resilience you are building now is relevant. That is not a reason to dismiss how tiring it is; it is a reason not to be devastated by it.
The physical experience of week 22 continues the established pattern of the second trimester. The bump is growing visibly week by week — the fundal height measurable and tracked. The Braxton Hicks that may have started last week continue intermittently. Heartburn is ongoing for most people and typically worsens in the third trimester.
Week 22 has a quality that is specific to this stage: the pregnancy has become physical enough to be demanding, but is not yet in the final intensive stretch. The second trimester's positive middle stretch is still in play — the energy, the movements, the settled quality of being well past halfway — but the sleep disruption and physical discomforts of the later weeks are beginning to establish themselves. It is, in other words, a transition into a slightly more demanding phase, without being the full third trimester.
The daily kicks are one of the most reliably positive features of this week and the weeks around it. There is something in the constancy of them — the daily company, the individual rhythm, the sense of a relationship already in progress — that many people describe as the most connecting experience of the whole pregnancy. You know them. You know their patterns. You can feel when they're awake and when they're not. This is a relationship, already well underway.
Twenty-two weeks was when I properly understood that I loved them. Not because something dramatic happened — just the ordinary week of feeling them every day, knowing their busy times, finding myself talking to them during the commute. It was just love, accumulated in small moments. There wasn't a single big moment. It crept up on me.
Birth preparation, if it hasn't yet started, begins to feel more pressing from around this point. The second trimester sometimes produces a comfortable sense that there is still plenty of time. There is — but the weeks between now and 36 weeks, when preparation should be largely complete, pass faster than expected. Beginning to engage with birth education, building a birth preferences outline, understanding the options: all of this is easier done now than later.
The themes of week 22 connect to these full topic guides.
Week 22 is often the week partners describe as a turning point. The kicks are strong enough to be felt from outside. The face, if you have had a scan recently, looks like a face. The relationship that your partner has been in privately since the first flutter is now something you can physically participate in. Place your hand on the bump at an active moment and wait. When it happens — the distinct push against your palm — it will not feel like an abstraction.
Sleep disruption is becoming a shared household reality from about now. If your partner is waking frequently, is uncomfortable, or is struggling with 3am thinking, the practical support that helps most is not advice — it is presence and reduced pressure. Taking something off the morning schedule so they can nap, making sure the bedroom setup is as comfortable as possible (pregnancy pillow, propped mattress, reduced ambient light), and not treating their tiredness as something to fix are all useful forms of support.
Buy a pregnancy pillow. This is the week to do it — before the sleep disruption becomes more severe and before the physical discomforts of the third trimester compound. A full-length body pillow or U-shaped pregnancy pillow simultaneously supports the bump, relieves hip and lower back pressure, and keeps the body in a comfortable side-lying position. It is not a luxury; it is a sleep aid that most people who use one wish they had bought earlier.
At your next appointment, if sleep or physical symptoms are affecting your daily life significantly:
These symptoms are common but not untreatable. Iron deficiency (contributing to restless legs and fatigue) is easily tested and supplemented. Pelvic girdle pain responds well to physiotherapy, which is available on the NHS. Sleep that is severely disrupted warrants honest discussion rather than stoic endurance. Raising these things at appointments rather than waiting to see if they resolve is almost always the better approach — your midwife cannot address what they don't know about.