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February 02, 2026 6 min read

Most pregnant women open their phones before they open a book. Whether it's checking what size the baby is this week, logging symptoms, or just wanting to know if what they're feeling is normal – pregnancy apps have become a genuine part of how Australians experience pregnancy.
The problem is there are a lot of them, and they're not all equally useful. This guide covers the ten best pregnancy apps available in Australia right now, what each one actually does well, and who it suits best.
Pregnancy+ is consistently one of the highest-rated pregnancy apps in Australia and for good reason. It covers all the fundamentals – week-by-week fetal development with 3D visualisations, symptom logging, a contraction timer, kick counter, weight tracker, and a due date calculator – in a clean, easy-to-navigate interface. The hospital bag checklist and birth plan creator are genuinely useful features that go beyond what most trackers offer.
Best for: First-time parents who want a comprehensive, reliable tracker in one place.
Key features: Interactive 3D fetal development models, daily pregnancy articles, contraction timer, kick counter, weight log, pregnancy calendar, hospital bag checklist, birth plan creator.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
What to Expect is one of the most downloaded pregnancy apps globally and rates consistently highly among Australian mums. Based on the trusted book series, it offers week-by-week development updates, a symptom checker, and a large community forum where you can connect with others at the same stage. The content is medically reviewed, which makes it a reliable first stop when something feels off and you want a sense of whether it's normal before calling your midwife.
Best for: Parents who want reassurance-focused content and an active community.
Key features: Week-by-week updates, symptom checker, medically reviewed articles, due date calculator, kick counter, contraction timer, community groups by due date.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
The Bump stands out for its "Inside The Bump" 3D visualisations — interactive animations of fetal development that go further than the static images most apps use. It's a well-designed app with solid tracking tools, a baby name finder, and a registry integration that makes it useful well beyond the first trimester. The journal feature is a nice addition for parents who want to document the pregnancy as they go.
Best for: Parents who want to see as well as read about their baby's development.
Key features: Week-by-week tracker, interactive 3D fetal visualisations, daily expert articles, due date calculator, kick counter, contraction timer, baby name finder, registry integration, pregnancy journal.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
The Babylist app solves the problem of scattered wishlists across multiple stores by letting you add items from any retailer into a single registry. IKEA, Amazon, Baby Bunting, Etsy – it doesn't matter where the item is listed. The price comparison tool shows the same item across multiple retailers so gift-givers can choose the best deal, and the group gifting feature is useful for larger purchases like prams or nursery furniture.
Best for: Expecting parents who want a streamlined, universal baby registry.
Key features: Universal registry across any store, price comparison tool, group gifting, non-material gift options (meals, babysitting, cash funds), personalised checklist, browser extension for adding items while shopping.
Note: The free Hello Box sample offer currently requires a US shipping address and is unavailable in Australia.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
Ready to build your registry? Read our guide: How to Create a Baby Registry with Babylist.
GentleBirth is built specifically around birth preparation rather than general pregnancy tracking, which makes it a different proposition to most apps on this list. It combines hypnobirthing techniques, mindfulness, breathing exercises, and positive psychology tools to help parents approach labour with more confidence and less anxiety.
Daily training sessions adapt automatically based on your due date – so what you're working on at 10 weeks is different from what you're doing at 36 weeks. The content continues postpartum through the first year, making it more of a long-term companion than a one-trimester tool. It works for all birth types – medicated, unmedicated, vaginal, or caesarean – and includes partner preparation content for all relationship types and family structures.
Best for: Parents who want to actively prepare mentally and emotionally for birth.
Key features: Daily brain-training sessions, hypnobirthing and mindfulness audio, curated playlists for sleep and anxiety, community of 10,000+ members, partner preparation resources. Premium version adds offline access and extended content.
Cost: Free (in-app purchases)
Download: App Store | Google Play
Peanut is a social app for women across all stages – trying to conceive, pregnancy, motherhood, and beyond. The Bump Buddies feature connects you with other mums who share your due date, which is one of the more useful ways to build a support network during pregnancy. Community groups cover everything from mental health to specific pregnancy conditions, and Live Audio Pods allow real-time conversations with other women or experts.
Best for: Expecting mums who want to find their community, particularly if they're new to an area or don't have a strong existing support network.
Key features: Due date matching (Bump Buddies), community groups, Live Audio Pods, profile discovery and matching, keyword muting for sensitive topics.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
Ovia suits parents who like to track comprehensively. Beyond the standard fetal development updates, it logs symptoms, mood, sleep, activity, weight, and nutrition in one place – with charts and health summaries that let you visualise trends over time. The food and medication safety lookup is one of its most practical features, giving quick answers to the common question of "can I eat this?"
Best for: Detail-oriented parents who want to monitor their health data throughout pregnancy.
Key features: Week-by-week development updates, comprehensive health logging, food and medication safety lookup, kick counter, contraction timer, due date calculator, medically reviewed articles, community forum, calendar integration.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
Baby2Body is the only app on this list focused primarily on fitness and wellness rather than tracking. It offers trimester-specific workout programs designed by prenatal fitness experts, covering gentle exercise, yoga, and strength training. The nutrition guidance and guided meditations round it out as a full wellness platform. Notably, a 2023 independent review found Baby2Body achieved the highest overall usability score of any pregnancy app tested in Australia.
Best For: Pregnant women who want structured, safe exercise guidance and wellness support.
Key features: Trimester-specific workout plans, prenatal yoga, strength training, AI-powered pregnancy tracker, customised nutrition and meal plans, guided meditation, pelvic floor exercises.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
Pelvic floor exercises are recommended throughout pregnancy and postpartum, but most people don't do them consistently without a prompt. Kegel Trainer keeps it simple – guided sessions of 30 seconds to 3 minutes, daily reminders, and discreet operation via visual, audio, or vibration cues. It's a single-purpose app that does its one job well.
Best for: Anyone who wants a straightforward, reminder-driven pelvic floor exercise routine.
Key features: 10 session options (30 seconds to 3 minutes), daily reminders, visual/audio/vibration cues, achievement tracking, Apple Watch support. Pro version adds custom levels.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store | Google Play
When labour starts, Full Term does one thing and does it well: tracks contractions. A single tap starts and stops the timer, the app records time, duration, and frequency automatically, and customisable alerts tell you when you've hit the 5-1-1 rule (contractions five minutes apart, lasting one minute, for one hour). The kick counter is a useful addition for the weeks beforehand.
Best for: Tracking contractions in labour – download it before you need it.
Key features: One-tap contraction tracking, complete contraction history, customisable alerts (5-1-1 rule or custom), kick counter, Apple Watch support.
Cost: Free
Download: App Store – iOS only
You don't need all ten. Most parents settle on one or two that fit how they actually want to use their phone during pregnancy.
Think about what you primarily want: if it's week-by-week development information and tracking, Pregnancy+ or What to Expect are the most comprehensive. If it's birth preparation specifically, GentleBirth stands apart. If it's community and connection, Peanut. If it's fitness, Baby2Body. If you're building a registry, Babylist.
These apps are useful tools but they're not a substitute for professional medical care. Keep up with your regular appointments and always check with your midwife, GP, or obstetrician if something concerns you.
Looking for something beyond the screen? Browse Lulu Babe's collection of newborn gifts, nappy bags, and baby clothing – everything you need for when the baby actually arrives.