Pregnancy fatigue despite sleep is a common concern, leaving many women wondering why they still feel exhausted even after a full night’s rest.
Pregnancy has a way of making you question your own body.
One of the most common things I hear from pregnant women is:
“I slept for eight or nine hours. Why do I still feel exhausted?”
It can feel frustrating, especially when family members keep telling you to “just get more rest.”
The problem is that many women are already spending enough time in bed.
Yet they wake up feeling as if they barely slept.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not imagining it.
Quick Answer
Waking up tired despite sleeping for 8–9 hours during pregnancy is often related to poor sleep quality rather than insufficient sleep. Frequent bathroom trips, pelvic pain, restless legs syndrome, sleep fragmentation, stress, breathing changes, iron deficiency, and pregnancy-related sleep disorders can all prevent your body from getting the deep restorative sleep it needs. As a result, you may spend enough time in bed but still wake up feeling exhausted.
As a physiotherapist who works with women during pregnancy, I often explain that fatigue and sleep are not always the same thing.
You can technically sleep for a long time and still wake up feeling drained, heavy, and mentally foggy.
The reason is that pregnancy changes the way your body sleeps, recovers, breathes, moves, and uses energy.
Sometimes the issue is not how many hours you slept.
It’s what happened to your body during those hours.
Let’s explore why this happens and what may actually be contributing to your tiredness.
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Key Takeaways
- Sleeping longer does not always mean sleeping better.
- Sleep fragmentation is a common reason pregnant women wake up tired.
- Pelvic pain, restless legs syndrome, insomnia, and breathing issues can affect sleep quality.
- Iron deficiency may contribute to persistent fatigue.
- Appropriate physical activity often supports better sleep and energy levels.
- Persistent or severe fatigue should be discussed with a healthcare professional.
Pregnancy Fatigue Is Different From Ordinary Tiredness
Most people compare pregnancy fatigue to the exhaustion they feel after a busy week at work.
In reality, they are very different experiences.
Normal tiredness usually improves after a good night’s sleep.
Pregnancy fatigue often doesn’t.
Many women describe it as feeling as though their energy battery never fully charges.
They may sleep through the night yet still wake up feeling sluggish, unmotivated, or physically weak.
That happens because your body is carrying out countless processes while you sleep.
Even when you are resting, your body is:
- Building the placenta
- Increasing blood volume
- Supporting fetal growth
- Regulating hormones
- Adjusting metabolism
- Repairing tissues
- Preparing for labor
In simple terms, your body is working a night shift while you sleep.
Physiotherapist’s Clinical Insight
One of the biggest misconceptions I hear from pregnant women is that sleeping longer should automatically make them feel refreshed. In reality, many women are getting enough hours of sleep but not enough quality sleep. Frequent position changes, pelvic discomfort, bathroom visits, and sleep interruptions can quietly prevent the body from entering deeper restorative sleep stages.
The Hidden Difference Between Sleeping Long and Sleeping Well
One of the biggest misconceptions about sleep is that more hours automatically mean better rest.
In pregnancy, that is often not true.
A woman may spend nine hours in bed but experience dozens of brief interruptions throughout the night.
Many of these interruptions are so short that she may not even remember them the next morning.
Sleep specialists call this sleep fragmentation.
Instead of moving smoothly through restorative sleep cycles, the brain keeps getting pulled toward wakefulness.
The result?
You wake up feeling as though your sleep never reached the deep, refreshing stage your body needed.
Research has shown that sleep quality often declines throughout pregnancy, even when total sleep duration remains relatively unchanged. (Mindell et al. 2015)
This is one reason why counting sleep hours alone can be misleading.
Lesser-Known Facts About Pregnancy Fatigue
- You can wake up briefly dozens of times during the night without remembering it.
- Sleep fragmentation often causes more fatigue than sleeping fewer hours.
- Pelvic girdle pain can disrupt sleep months before it significantly affects daily activities.
- Some pregnant women develop sleep-disordered breathing even if they never had sleep problems before pregnancy.
- Iron deficiency may contribute to both fatigue and restless legs syndrome.
Your Body Is Doing More Work at Night Than You Realize
Many pregnant women assume that because they are lying still, their body is resting.
From a physiological perspective, pregnancy is an incredibly active state.
Blood volume can increase significantly during pregnancy to support both mother and baby.
The heart pumps harder.
The respiratory system adapts.
Hormones fluctuate.
The growing fetus continuously requires nutrients and oxygen.
Imagine running a small factory 24 hours a day.
Even if the factory manager goes home to sleep, the machines keep running.
That is essentially what pregnancy asks your body to do.
This constant physiological workload is one reason why fatigue can persist even after what appears to be a full night’s sleep.
Frequent Nighttime Bathroom Trips May Be Affecting
Most pregnant women expect to urinate more frequently.
What many do not realize is how much those bathroom trips can affect sleep quality.
You may wake up, use the bathroom, and fall back asleep within a few minutes.
It doesn’t seem like a major issue.
However, every awakening interrupts the natural progression of sleep cycles.
When these interruptions occur repeatedly throughout the night, deep restorative sleep can become fragmented.
In clinical practice, I often see women who report:
“I fall asleep easily. I just keep waking up.”
That distinction matters.
Difficulty staying asleep can sometimes have a greater impact on daytime energy than difficulty falling asleep.
The Lesser-Known Role of Sleep Position

Many pregnancy articles simply tell women to sleep on their side.
The reality is a bit more complicated.
As pregnancy progresses, side sleeping may become uncomfortable for some women due to:
- Hip pain
- Pelvic girdle pain
- Rib discomfort
- Shoulder discomfort
- Lower back pain
The discomfort may not fully wake them up.
Instead, they unconsciously shift sleeping positions multiple times during the night.
Each movement can briefly disrupt sleep architecture.
Over weeks and months, these small disturbances add up.
A woman may believe she slept continuously while her nervous system experienced repeated interruptions.
Pelvic Girdle Pain Can Quietly Steal Your Sleep
One often overlooked cause of pregnancy fatigue is pelvic girdle pain.
Some women experience:
- Pain when turning in bed
- Pain when separating the knees
- Pain around the pubic bone
- Pain in the buttocks or sacroiliac joints
These symptoms frequently worsen at night.
I’ve worked with women who assumed their fatigue was simply a normal pregnancy symptom.
Once their pelvic pain was addressed through physiotherapy, they reported noticeably better sleep and improved energy levels within weeks.
The relationship between pain and sleep works both ways.
Poor sleep can increase pain sensitivity.
Pain can then further disrupt sleep.
This creates a frustrating cycle.
Research has consistently linked musculoskeletal pain during pregnancy with poorer sleep quality and greater fatigue. (Serdar et al. 2018)
Why Some Women Feel More Tired in the Second Trimester
Many pregnancy books describe the second trimester as the “energy trimester.”
While that may be true for some women, it is not universal.
I’ve seen plenty of women who are surprised when fatigue continues beyond the first trimester.
There are several reasons for this.
The baby’s growth accelerates.
Maternal blood volume continues increasing.
Nutritional demands rise.
Physical activity often decreases.
Sleep quality may gradually worsen.
In other words, even though nausea may improve, new factors begin contributing to tiredness.
This is why comparing your pregnancy experience with someone else’s can be misleading.
Your body has its own demands and adaptations.
When Stress Keeps Working After You Fall Asleep
Many pregnant women associate stress with difficulty falling asleep.
What often goes unnoticed is that stress can affect sleep even after you have already fallen asleep.
Concerns about:
- Labor
- Baby’s health
- Finances
- Work responsibilities
- Parenting
can increase nighttime arousal within the nervous system.
A woman may technically remain asleep but spend less time in restorative sleep stages.
This can contribute to waking up unrefreshed.
Several studies have found strong associations between stress, anxiety, and poorer sleep quality during pregnancy. (Yu et al. 2024)
This does not mean fatigue is “all in your head.”
It means that the brain and body are deeply connected, particularly during pregnancy.
The Surprising Connection Between Physical Inactivity and Fatigue
This is one of the most misunderstood topics in pregnancy.
When women feel exhausted, the natural response is often to rest more.
Sometimes that is exactly what the body needs.
But sometimes excessive inactivity can worsen fatigue.
It sounds contradictory, yet it is something we frequently see in physiotherapy.
Gentle movement helps:
- Improve circulation
- Support sleep quality
- Maintain muscle function
- Improve mood
- Enhance energy regulation
Women who spend long periods sitting or lying down often describe feeling even more sluggish.
The goal is not intense exercise.
The goal is appropriate movement.
Even short walks, prenatal mobility exercises, and physiotherapist-guided strengthening programs can help support energy levels.
A Clue Many Women Miss
If you wake up tired despite getting enough hours of sleep, ask yourself this question:
“Am I sleeping uninterrupted, comfortable, pain-free, and breathing well?”
Most women focus only on the number of hours.
The quality of those hours may reveal much more.
Restless Legs Syndrome
The Pregnancy Sleep Thief Most Women Have Never Heard Of
Sometimes the problem isn’t that you’re waking up.
The problem is that your body never truly settles into deep sleep.
One condition I frequently ask pregnant women about is Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS).
Many women have never heard of it before pregnancy.
Typical symptoms include:
- An urge to move the legs
- Tingling sensations
- Crawling feelings under the skin
- Leg discomfort that worsens at night
- Temporary relief when moving or walking
Women often describe it as:
“I can’t explain it. My legs just won’t stay still.”
The symptoms tend to become worse during the evening and can make it difficult to enter deep restorative sleep.
What’s interesting is that many women don’t initially mention these symptoms because they assume they are a normal part of pregnancy.
Research suggests that Restless Legs Syndrome is relatively common during pregnancy, particularly during the third trimester. (Gupta et al. 2017)
If your legs feel unusually restless at night, it’s worth discussing with your healthcare provider.
Could Low Iron Levels Be Playing a Role?
When pregnant women complain of overwhelming fatigue, iron status is one of the first things healthcare providers often investigate.
Iron is essential for:
- Oxygen transport
- Energy production
- Brain function
- Muscle function
As pregnancy progresses, iron requirements increase significantly.
The growing baby, placenta, and expanding maternal blood volume all demand additional iron.
Sometimes women develop iron deficiency gradually and don’t immediately recognize the symptoms.
Signs may include:
- Extreme fatigue
- Shortness of breath
- Dizziness
- Poor concentration
- Reduced exercise tolerance
Iron deficiency can also contribute to Restless Legs Syndrome, creating a double impact on sleep quality.
The World Health Organization identifies iron deficiency anemia as one of the most common nutritional deficiencies during pregnancy. (World Health Organization 2024)
If fatigue feels disproportionate to your stage of pregnancy, discussing blood work with your obstetric provider may be worthwhile.
Sleep Apnea Is Not Just a Condition That Affects Men
When people hear the term sleep apnea, they often picture an older man who snores loudly.
Pregnancy changes that picture.
Pregnancy-related changes can increase the likelihood of sleep-disordered breathing.
These changes include:
- Weight gain
- Increased fluid retention
- Nasal congestion
- Airway narrowing
- Hormonal influences on breathing
Sleep apnea occurs when breathing repeatedly pauses or becomes restricted during sleep.
Many women have no idea it is happening.
Common signs include:
- Loud snoring
- Waking up with headaches
- Dry mouth in the morning
- Excessive daytime fatigue
- Feeling unrefreshed despite adequate sleep
One of the reasons this condition is often overlooked is that women don’t necessarily wake up during every breathing interruption.
The body experiences the disruption even if the person doesn’t remember it.
Recent reviews have shown growing recognition of sleep-disordered breathing as an important issue during pregnancy. (Facco et al. 2023)
Why Pregnancy Insomnia Doesn’t Always Mean “Can’t Fall Asleep”
When people think about insomnia, they usually imagine lying awake staring at the ceiling.
Pregnancy insomnia can look very different.
Some women:
- Fall asleep easily
- Wake up multiple times
- Struggle to return to sleep
- Wake up much earlier than planned
- Feel exhausted despite spending enough time in bed
Hormonal fluctuations, discomfort, anxiety, fetal movements, reflux, and urinary frequency can all contribute.
Research indicates that insomnia symptoms become increasingly common as pregnancy progresses. (Hashmi et al. 2016)
What matters is not simply whether you slept.
What matters is whether your sleep was restorative.
The Surprising Link Between Breathing and Energy Levels
As physiotherapists, we don’t just look at sleep.
We also look at breathing patterns.
Many pregnant women unknowingly shift toward shallow upper-chest breathing as the uterus grows and changes the mechanics of the diaphragm.
This doesn’t necessarily indicate a medical problem.
However, inefficient breathing patterns may contribute to:
- Increased perceived exertion
- Reduced exercise tolerance
- Feelings of fatigue
- Poor relaxation
Simple breathing exercises can sometimes make a noticeable difference.
I often teach women to focus on:
- Lateral rib expansion
- Controlled diaphragmatic breathing
- Relaxed exhalation
The goal isn’t to force deep breaths.
The goal is to help the respiratory system work more efficiently.
When Your Body Is Asking for Movement, Not More Rest
One of the biggest myths about pregnancy fatigue is that more rest is always the answer.
Sometimes it is.
But not always.
I often see women become trapped in a cycle:
Fatigue → less movement → reduced fitness → increased fatigue.
The less active they become, the harder everyday activities feel.
This doesn’t mean pushing through exhaustion.
It means finding appropriate movement.
For many women, that may include:
- Walking
- Prenatal yoga
- Gentle mobility work
- Pelvic stability exercises
- Pregnancy-safe strengthening
Movement is not a cure for fatigue.
However, appropriate activity often improves energy regulation more than people expect.
Physiotherapy Tips for Better Sleep During Pregnancy
Women often ask me whether there is one secret trick that fixes pregnancy fatigue.
Unfortunately, there isn’t.
Usually it’s a combination of small improvements.
Improve Bed Mobility
If turning in bed causes discomfort, learn strategies that reduce strain on the pelvis and lower back.
Using a pillow between the knees can help some women maintain a more comfortable position.
Address Pain Early
Many women wait months before seeking help for pelvic girdle pain or back pain.
The earlier these issues are addressed, the less likely they are to interfere with sleep.
Avoid Long Periods of Inactivity
Gentle movement throughout the day often supports better sleep at night.
Create a Wind-Down Routine
The nervous system benefits from consistency.
Simple habits such as light stretching, breathing exercises, and reducing screen exposure before bed may help signal that it’s time to sleep.
Discuss Persistent Fatigue With Your Healthcare Provider
Not all fatigue should be dismissed as “just pregnancy.”
Sometimes there is an underlying issue that deserves attention.
When Fatigue Should Not Be Ignored
Contact your healthcare provider if your tiredness is accompanied by:
- Severe shortness of breath
- Fainting or dizziness
- Rapid heartbeat
- Persistent headaches
- Loud snoring with excessive daytime sleepiness
- Extreme weakness affecting daily activities
- Symptoms of depression or anxiety
- Concerns about anemia or nutritional deficiencies
When Should You Seek Professional Advice?
Contact your healthcare provider if fatigue is accompanied by:
- Severe shortness of breath
- Dizziness
- Fainting
- Significant weakness
- Loud snoring with daytime sleepiness
- Symptoms of depression
- Concerns about anemia
- Sudden worsening fatigue
While tiredness is common during pregnancy, extreme exhaustion should never be ignored.
Simple Physiotherapy Strategies to Improve Sleep Quality
- Use pillows to support your hips, knees, and lower back during side sleeping.
- Address pelvic girdle pain early instead of waiting for symptoms to worsen.
- Stay physically active with pregnancy-safe exercises approved by your healthcare provider.
- Practice gentle breathing exercises before bedtime.
- Avoid remaining in one position for long periods during the day.
- Seek professional assessment if pain repeatedly wakes you at night.
The Bottom Line
If you’re sleeping for eight or nine hours and still waking up exhausted, it doesn’t automatically mean you’re doing something wrong.
In many cases, the issue isn’t sleep quantity.
It’s sleep quality.
Pain, sleep fragmentation, breathing changes, Restless Legs Syndrome, iron deficiency, stress, insomnia, and reduced physical activity can all contribute to feeling drained even after a full night in bed.
As a physiotherapist, I encourage pregnant women to stop judging their sleep only by the clock.
Instead, pay attention to how your body feels.
A night of uninterrupted, comfortable, restorative sleep is often far more valuable than simply spending more hours in bed.
Pregnancy places extraordinary demands on the body.
Sometimes fatigue is a signal that your body needs support, not criticism.
Understanding the reason behind that tiredness is often the first step toward feeling better.
Final Thoughts
Feeling exhausted despite spending enough time in bed can be frustrating during pregnancy. However, sleep duration is only one piece of the puzzle. Factors such as sleep fragmentation, pelvic discomfort, restless legs syndrome, breathing changes, stress, iron deficiency, and pregnancy-related sleep disorders can all affect how rested you feel the next morning.
As a physiotherapist, I often remind pregnant women that the goal is not simply to sleep longer, it is to sleep better. Paying attention to pain, movement, sleep quality, and overall wellbeing can make a significant difference in your energy levels. If fatigue feels excessive or continues to interfere with your daily life, do not hesitate to discuss it with your healthcare provider. Sometimes a small change or timely intervention can dramatically improve both sleep and quality of life during pregnancy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it normal to wake up tired during pregnancy even after sleeping for 8 hours?
Yes. Many pregnant women sleep for an adequate number of hours but still wake up tired because sleep quality is affected by pain, frequent urination, stress, hormonal changes, or repeated sleep interruptions.
Why am I more tired in my second trimester than expected?
Although many women experience improved energy during the second trimester, others continue to feel tired due to increasing blood volume, growing nutritional demands, sleep disturbances, reduced physical activity, or underlying issues such as iron deficiency.
Can pregnancy cause sleep problems even if I never had them before?
Yes. Pregnancy can increase the risk of insomnia, restless legs syndrome, sleep-disordered breathing, and frequent nighttime awakenings, even in women who previously slept well.
Does pelvic pain affect sleep quality during pregnancy?
Absolutely. Pelvic girdle pain and lower back pain can make it difficult to stay comfortable in bed, causing repeated position changes and sleep interruptions throughout the night.
Can iron deficiency make me feel tired even after sleeping?
Yes. Iron deficiency can reduce oxygen delivery throughout the body, contributing to fatigue, weakness, poor concentration, and sometimes restless legs syndrome.
How can physiotherapy help improve sleep during pregnancy?
Physiotherapy may help by addressing pelvic pain, improving movement patterns, teaching sleep-supportive positioning strategies, prescribing safe exercises, and promoting better overall physical comfort.
Should I worry if I feel exhausted every day during pregnancy?
While some fatigue is normal, severe or worsening exhaustion should be discussed with your healthcare provider, especially if it is accompanied by dizziness, breathlessness, headaches, or other concerning symptoms.
What is sleep fragmentation during pregnancy?
Sleep fragmentation refers to repeated interruptions during sleep, even if you do not fully remember waking up. These disruptions can prevent deep restorative sleep and leave you feeling tired the next day.
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Medical Disclaimer!
This article has been reviewed and written under the guidance of our Head Physiotherapist, Dr. Kruti Raj (PT, MUHS,CPT,CMPT). The information shared is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered a substitute for personalized medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Please consult us or any other qualified healthcare professional before beginning any exercise program, especially if you are experiencing pain, recovering from injury, or managing a medical condition.