In the third trimester, try to fall asleep on your side, but do not panic if you wake up on your back. The main guidance focuses on how you start sleep, not on controlling every position change overnight.
Try to fall asleep on your side once you reach the third trimester, but do not panic if you wake up on your back. The strongest guidance focuses on your going-to-sleep position, not on perfectly controlling every overnight turn.
If you keep waking up at 3:00 AM flat on your back and instantly wondering whether you did something harmful, you are far from alone. A major evidence review pooled data from more than 3,100 pregnancies, and the part that matters most for daily life is narrower than many pregnant people are told. Here is the clear version: what the guidance means, why it exists, and how to make side sleeping feel more doable.

What the guidance says right now
Side sleeping in the third trimester is the current guidance. In plain language, that means once you are past 28 weeks, try to start the night on either side, and do the same after a bathroom trip or a daytime nap. That wording matters because it is about the position you choose when falling asleep, not about policing every position change your body makes overnight.
Higher odds of stillbirth with back sleeping at sleep onset is the main concern raised in the best-known evidence review. “Supine” simply means flat on your back. In the 2021 review, pooled case-control data showed higher odds of stillbirth with back sleeping at sleep onset, and it also found a signal for babies being born small for gestational age. That does not prove that a few accidental minutes on your back cause harm, but it does explain why side sleeping has become the standard late-pregnancy advice.
Why some experts phrase it more carefully
Some specialists argue the certainty is lower than headlines suggest. In a March 14, 2025 discussion, physicians pointed out that much of the research is case-control, which can be vulnerable to recall bias because women are asked to remember sleep position after a terrible outcome. They also noted that a large U.S. prospective study with detailed sleep assessment had not yet fully reported results. The fairest reading is this: side sleeping is the safer habit to aim for, but a rough night does not deserve guilt.
Why back sleeping raises concern
Pressure on major blood vessels is the main reason clinicians worry about back sleeping later in pregnancy. The vessel most often mentioned is the vena cava, which helps return blood to your heart. If that flow drops, some pregnant people feel nauseated, dizzy, or short of breath. If you have ever felt suddenly woozy while lying flat during a scan, a massage, or a stretch on the couch, that is the kind of body signal clinicians are talking about.
Reduced blood flow to you and the baby is the related concern. Once the uterus is large enough, often by about 20 weeks, lying flat may press on the aorta and inferior vena cava. The practical point is not that every second on your back is dangerous; it is that late pregnancy changes the mechanics of resting flat, and your body may tolerate it less well than it used to.
Is the left side better than the right side?
Left-side sleeping is often preferred for circulation and comfort. It may reduce pressure on the liver and can feel easier when swelling, heartburn, or heavy-belly discomfort show up. But the 2021 review did not find an important stillbirth association for right-sided going-to-sleep compared with left-sided sleep onset, which means side sleeping matters more than achieving one perfect side all night. If your left hip goes numb at 2:00 AM, rolling to the right is usually a much better plan than fighting your body until you are fully awake.
A quick position check
Sleep position |
Main upside |
Main downside |
Practical note |
Left side |
Often best for circulation and may ease swelling or pressure |
Can irritate one hip or shoulder if you stay there too long |
Use pillows to share the load |
Right side |
Usually a comfortable backup when the left side gets sore |
May not feel quite as comfortable for everyone |
Still counts as side sleeping |
Back |
Can feel neutral on the hips early in pregnancy |
Later on, may worsen dizziness, breathlessness, or low blood pressure |
Best avoided for going to sleep in the third trimester |
Stomach |
Sometimes comfortable early on |
Usually becomes uncomfortable as the belly grows |
If you wake that way, just reposition |
What if you wake up on your back?
Waking up on your back is not treated the same as choosing it at bedtime. Sleep position at the start of the night is what the research focused on, not the position you happen to be in later during the night. The simplest response is also the best one: roll back onto your side and go back to sleep.

Short periods on your back are unlikely to cause lasting harm. Brief spells, such as waking up on your back or lying back for a short stretch, are not the same as spending the whole night flat and motionless. That distinction matters emotionally as much as physically, because bedtime should not become a running self-audit.
Your body often gives you feedback before anything more serious happens. People who react to lying flat may notice nausea, dizziness, or shortness of breath. So if you wake up feeling fine, reposition and move on. If lying flat repeatedly makes you feel bad, that is useful information to bring to your prenatal clinician.
How to make side sleeping feel less miserable
A side-sleep setup with pillows usually works better than trying to force yourself to stay still. The simplest arrangement is a pillow between your knees, another tucked under your belly, and a third behind your back so you are not rolling fully backward. In real bedrooms, this often works better than trying to hold one position all night. Even one extra bed pillow placed behind the lower back can turn “I keep flipping over” into “I can stay comfortable long enough to fall asleep.”

Small comfort changes can matter as much as position. A dark, quiet room, a regular bedtime, and lighter evening eating can help alongside pillow support. If heartburn is your real sleep thief, propping your upper body slightly may help more than obsessing over your shoulder angle. If congestion, snoring, or breathlessness keeps getting worse, mention that too, because poor sleep in pregnancy is not always just a pillow problem.
Nonmedication fixes should usually come first when sleep starts falling apart. That matters if you are tempted to add melatonin, antihistamines, or herbal sleep products on your own. Safety data in pregnancy are limited, and “natural” does not automatically mean well studied. When exhaustion is severe, the better move is a quick conversation with your OB-GYN or midwife about what is actually safe for your situation.
The bottom line
Aiming for side sleep after 28 weeks is the safest practical habit. Try to start sleep on your side, use pillows so your body is not doing all the work, and treat the left side as a preference rather than a perfection test.
One uncomfortable night is not a moral failure. Calm, supported sleep is still the goal, and if lying flat makes you dizzy, short of breath, or consistently miserable, that is worth a real conversation at your next prenatal visit.