Basal Body Temperature as a Guide to Cycle and Fertility

Tracking your basal body temperature is an incredibly valuable tool for getting to know your body better. It not only provides insights into your cycle, but it also gives you back control over your fertility, health, and well-being in a completely natural way.

Your body’s temperature says more than you think. Learn how tracking your basal body temperature (BBT) can reveal fertile days, signal ovulation, and even hint at early pregnancy.

Discover how measuring your basal temperature helps you better understand your cycle and identify fertile and non-fertile days. With the basal temperature method, you can make the most of your body’s natural signals for family planning and overall health.

Your guide to interpreting basal temperature charts and recognizing patterns – from typical temperature curves to potential signs of health changes.

Basal Body Temperature – The Most Reliable Guide to Your Cycle and Fertility

Basal body temperature (BBT) is your body's temperature at complete rest, measured first thing in the morning before you move, speak or get out of bed. It is one of the most scientifically well-established methods for understanding the female cycle, identifying ovulation and tracking fertility naturally. Measuring your BBT every day opens a window into your own biology that no other tool can match for precision.

What Is BBT and Why Is It So Meaningful?

After ovulation, progesterone levels in the blood rise. Progesterone is the dominant hormone of the second half of the cycle and it raises basal body temperature by a measurable 0.2 to 0.5°C (0.4 to 0.9°F). This rise persists until the next period begins. It is a reliable, body-generated signal that confirms one thing clearly: ovulation has occurred. No app in the world can predict this rise from statistical averages alone. But Daysy measures it every morning with a precision of 0.05°C and interprets it scientifically, giving you a clear, evidence-based picture of your cycle every single day.

How to Measure BBT Correctly

Every morning, immediately after waking up and before getting out of bed, at the same time each day. Place the sensor under your tongue for 60 seconds. That's it. Daysy handles the entire analysis automatically. You measure, Daysy does the rest.

Reading and Understanding Your Temperature Curve

Your BBT curve tells the story of your cycle. During the first half of your cycle, the follicular phase, temperature sits at a lower baseline level. After ovulation it rises noticeably and stays elevated until your next period begins. This biphasic pattern is the foundation of the BBT method. Learning to read your own curve means being able to see ovulation, cycle length, luteal phase duration and meaningful health changes – all reflected in a simple daily temperature reading.

BBT as a Health Indicator

Your BBT curve provides far more than just information about fertility and ovulation. It can also offer clues about hormonal imbalances, a luteal phase that is too short, anovulatory cycles or other health-related patterns worth paying attention to. Women who observe their curve over several months often recognize patterns that become genuinely valuable in conversations with their OB-GYN, midwife or healthcare provider – giving them real data to bring to those appointments rather than just a general sense that something feels off.

In the BBT section on the Daysy website you'll find in-depth interpretation guides, temperature curve explainers and the science behind the method. Everything you need to truly understand basal body temperature and get the most out of your tracking.