BrewFYI

Health & Wellness

Coffee During Pregnancy

What the research says about caffeine consumption during pregnancy. Covers current medical guidelines, the evidence behind them, and practical strategies for managing caffeine intake while pregnant.

1 min read

What Expecting Parents Should Know

Current Medical Guidelines

Most major organizations converge: ACOG, NHS, and EFSA recommend less than 200mg/day. WHO recommends less than 300mg/day. 200mg equals approximately one 12oz cup of brewed coffee, two espresso shots, or two cups of black tea.

Why Caffeine Affects Pregnancy Differently

Caffeine half-life increases from 5-6 hours to 9-11 hours in the first trimester and 15-18 hours in the third trimester. The fetus is also exposed — caffeine crosses the placenta freely and the developing fetus lacks metabolizing enzymes.

What Research Shows

Miscarriage risk: High caffeine intake (300mg+/day) is associated with increased risk, particularly in the first trimester. Birth weight: Moderate to high intake associated with a small reduction (100-200g). Preterm birth: Evidence is inconsistent. Developmental effects: Not established at moderate intake levels.

The Debate

A 2020 review argued for complete abstinence. Major medical organizations consider 200mg/day a reasonable precautionary limit. The scientific community generally agrees the evidence does not support zero-tolerance for moderate consumption.

Practical Strategies

Track total daily intake from all sources. Switch to decaf (Swiss Water or CO2, 1-7mg per cup). Choose lower-caffeine options (espresso has 63mg vs 80-120mg for drip). Time intake earlier in the day. Taper gradually to avoid withdrawal headaches. Talk to your doctor for personalized advice.

The Bottom Line

Limit to under 200mg/day. For many women, the practical approach is switching to decaf for most of the day and allowing one small cup of regular coffee in the morning.

Bagian dari Beverage FYI Family