Evidence-based. References guidelines from ACOG, CDC, and WHO.
Informational only, not medical advice. Always consult your OB/GYN or healthcare provider.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is one of the most common pregnancy complications, affecting 2–10% of pregnancies in the United States each year, according to the CDC. It occurs when your body cannot produce enough insulin to handle the increased blood sugar demands of pregnancy, leading to elevated glucose levels that can affect both you and your baby.
The good news is that gestational diabetes is highly manageable. With proper diet, exercise, monitoring, and — if needed — medication, most women with GDM go on to have healthy pregnancies and healthy babies. For nutrition guidance, see our pregnancy safe foods list. But management requires understanding: knowing what the condition is, how it’s diagnosed, what your daily routine will look like, and how it affects your delivery plan.
This guide covers everything you need to know — from your first glucose test to postpartum follow-up — based on current ACOG, CDC, and ADA (American Diabetes Association) guidelines. Learn about other potential concerns in our pregnancy complications and insurance guide.
📌 Key Takeaway: Gestational diabetes affects 2–10% of U.S. pregnancies and is diagnosed through glucose screening between weeks 24–28. Most cases are managed with diet and exercise alone. Uncontrolled GDM increases risks of macrosomia (large baby), birth complications, and neonatal hypoglycemia. With proper management, outcomes are excellent. Blood sugar monitoring, a balanced meal plan, and regular communication with your provider are the pillars of care.

What Is Gestational Diabetes?
During pregnancy, the placenta produces hormones (human placental lactogen, cortisol, and estrogen) that help your baby grow. A side effect of these hormones is that they make your cells more resistant to insulin — the hormone that moves sugar from your blood into your cells for energy. This is called insulin resistance.
In most pregnancies, your pancreas compensates by producing more insulin. In gestational diabetes, the pancreas cannot keep up with the increased demand, and blood sugar levels rise above normal.
GDM typically develops in the second half of pregnancy (after week 20) and usually resolves after delivery when placental hormones are no longer present. However, having GDM increases your long-term risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
📊 Key Data: According to the CDC, women who have had gestational diabetes have a 50% chance of developing type 2 diabetes within 5–10 years after delivery. The ADA recommends glucose testing at 4–12 weeks postpartum and regular screening every 1–3 years thereafter. Lifestyle modifications (diet, exercise, weight management) can reduce this risk by up to 58%.
Risk Factors
While any pregnant woman can develop GDM, certain factors increase your risk.
| Risk Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Age over 25 | Risk increases with maternal age |
| BMI over 30 (pre-pregnancy) | Obesity is the strongest modifiable risk factor |
| Family history of diabetes | Parent or sibling with type 2 diabetes |
| Previous GDM | 33–50% recurrence rate in subsequent pregnancies |
| Previous macrosomic baby | Baby weighing over 4,000 g (8 lbs 13 oz) at birth |
| Ethnicity | Higher rates in Hispanic, Black, Native American, Asian, and Pacific Islander populations |
| Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) | Associated with insulin resistance |
| History of prediabetes | Fasting glucose 100–125 mg/dL before pregnancy |
| Multiple pregnancy (twins, triplets) | Higher placental hormone levels |
⚠️ Important: Having risk factors does not mean you will develop GDM, and having no risk factors does not guarantee you won’t. This is why universal screening between weeks 24–28 is recommended by ACOG for all pregnant women.
Glucose Testing: What to Expect
The One-Hour Glucose Challenge Test (GCT)
This is the initial screening test, performed between weeks 24 and 28.
Procedure:
- No fasting required
- Drink a 50-gram glucose solution (very sweet liquid)
- Blood is drawn exactly 1 hour later
- Results are typically available within a day
Results:
- Below 140 mg/dL — Normal (some providers use 130 mg/dL as the cutoff)
- 140 mg/dL or above — Abnormal; requires the 3-hour follow-up test
- 200 mg/dL or above — May indicate GDM without needing the 3-hour test
The Three-Hour Glucose Tolerance Test (GTT)
If your 1-hour test is elevated, this confirmatory test is the next step.
Procedure:
- Fast for 8–14 hours (overnight) before the test
- Fasting blood draw taken
- Drink a 100-gram glucose solution
- Blood drawn at 1 hour, 2 hours, and 3 hours after drinking
Diagnostic thresholds (Carpenter-Coustan criteria, used by most providers):
| Time Point | Threshold |
|---|---|
| Fasting | 95 mg/dL or higher |
| 1 hour | 180 mg/dL or higher |
| 2 hours | 155 mg/dL or higher |
| 3 hours | 140 mg/dL or higher |
Diagnosis: Two or more values meeting or exceeding the thresholds = gestational diabetes diagnosis.
💡 Tip: The glucose solution can cause nausea. Sip it slowly if allowed, and bring something to read or do during the 3-hour wait. Some women find that having the test early in the morning (after an overnight fast) reduces nausea. Ask your provider about lemon-flavored options, which some women tolerate better.
Managing Gestational Diabetes
Most cases of GDM (80–90%, per ADA) are managed with diet and exercise alone. Here’s what your management plan will include.
1. Blood Sugar Monitoring
You’ll need to check your blood sugar multiple times daily using a glucometer (finger-stick device).
| When to Test | Target (ACOG Guidelines) |
|---|---|
| Fasting (morning, before eating) | Below 95 mg/dL |
| 1 hour after meals | Below 140 mg/dL |
| 2 hours after meals | Below 120 mg/dL |
Your provider will teach you how to use the glucometer and interpret your readings. Most women test 4 times per day: fasting + after each main meal.
2. Diet and Meal Planning
Diet is the cornerstone of GDM management. The goal is to keep blood sugar stable throughout the day by balancing carbohydrates with protein and healthy fats.
Key principles:
- Eat 3 small meals and 2–3 snacks per day (avoid long gaps between eating)
- Distribute carbohydrates evenly across meals
- Pair carbs with protein or fat to slow glucose absorption
- Choose complex carbohydrates over simple sugars
- Limit fruit juice, candy, soda, and other high-sugar foods
Sample Meal Plan
| Meal | Example | Carb Target |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | 2 eggs + 1 slice whole-grain toast + avocado | 15–30 g |
| Morning snack | Greek yogurt + handful of almonds | 15 g |
| Lunch | Grilled chicken salad + quinoa + vegetables + olive oil dressing | 30–45 g |
| Afternoon snack | Apple slices + peanut butter | 15–20 g |
| Dinner | Baked salmon + brown rice + steamed broccoli | 30–45 g |
| Evening snack | Cheese + whole-grain crackers | 15 g |
💡 Tip: Breakfast is often the hardest meal for blood sugar control because cortisol (a hormone that raises blood sugar) is highest in the morning. Many women with GDM find that a higher-protein, lower-carb breakfast keeps fasting and post-breakfast numbers in range. Skip cereal and juice; try eggs, cheese, or a protein smoothie instead.
Use our Calorie Calculator to estimate your daily calorie needs during pregnancy with GDM, and track your pregnancy weight gain with our Weight Gain Calculator.
3. Exercise
Physical activity improves insulin sensitivity, helping your cells absorb glucose more effectively. ACOG recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate exercise per week for pregnant women, including those with GDM.
Effective exercises include:
- Walking (30 minutes after meals is particularly effective for blood sugar control)
- Swimming
- Stationary cycling
- Prenatal yoga
- Light strength training

4. Medication (If Needed)
If diet and exercise don’t bring your blood sugar within target ranges, your provider may recommend:
- Insulin injections — The gold standard for GDM medication. Insulin does not cross the placenta, making it safe for the baby. Your provider will teach you injection technique and dosing.
- Oral medications (metformin or glyburide) — Some providers prescribe these as alternatives, though ACOG notes that insulin remains the preferred pharmacologic treatment.
Needing medication is not a failure — some women produce more placental hormones that cause greater insulin resistance, regardless of diet and exercise. About 10–20% of women with GDM require insulin.
Effects on Your Baby
Uncontrolled gestational diabetes can increase risks for the baby:
| Risk | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Macrosomia (large baby) | Excess glucose crosses the placenta, causing baby to grow larger; babies over 4,000 g have higher rates of birth injury |
| Birth injuries | Shoulder dystocia (shoulder getting stuck during delivery) is more common with large babies |
| Neonatal hypoglycemia | Baby’s insulin production is elevated in utero; after birth, without the glucose supply, blood sugar can drop |
| Respiratory distress | Higher blood sugar may delay lung maturation |
| Jaundice | Slightly more common in babies of mothers with GDM |
| Future obesity/diabetes risk | Some studies suggest increased metabolic risk later in life |
⚠️ Important: With well-managed GDM (blood sugars consistently within target), the risk of these complications drops significantly and approaches that of a non-GDM pregnancy. Management — not the diagnosis itself — determines outcomes.
Delivery Considerations
Gestational diabetes influences the timing and method of delivery:
- Well-controlled GDM (diet-managed): Most providers allow pregnancy to continue to 39–40 weeks, per ACOG guidelines. Vaginal delivery is expected unless other indications arise.
- Well-controlled GDM (medication-managed): Induction may be recommended at 39 weeks to reduce the risk of macrosomia and stillbirth.
- Poorly controlled GDM or macrosomia: Earlier induction (37–39 weeks) or planned cesarean may be recommended.
- Estimated fetal weight over 4,500 g: ACOG suggests discussing planned cesarean to reduce the risk of shoulder dystocia.
During labor, your blood sugar will be monitored regularly, and IV insulin or glucose may be administered to maintain stable levels.
After Delivery: What Comes Next
Gestational diabetes typically resolves within hours to days after delivery as placental hormones leave your system. However, follow-up is essential:
- Postpartum glucose testing — The ADA recommends a 2-hour, 75-gram oral glucose tolerance test at 4–12 weeks postpartum to screen for type 2 diabetes or prediabetes.
- Ongoing screening — If postpartum results are normal, repeat screening every 1–3 years for life.
- Lifestyle modifications — Maintaining a healthy weight, regular exercise, and a balanced diet can reduce your risk of type 2 diabetes by up to 58% (Diabetes Prevention Program study).
- Breastfeeding — Research suggests that breastfeeding may improve glucose metabolism and reduce the mother’s long-term diabetes risk.
- Future pregnancies — If you had GDM, you have a 33–50% chance of developing it again. Early screening (at the first prenatal visit) is recommended in subsequent pregnancies.
FAQ
Will my baby have diabetes?
Having gestational diabetes does not mean your baby will have diabetes at birth. However, research suggests that babies born to mothers with GDM may have a slightly increased risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes later in life. This risk is modifiable through healthy lifestyle habits — a balanced diet and regular physical activity — throughout childhood and adolescence.
Can I prevent gestational diabetes?
There is no guaranteed way to prevent GDM, but you can reduce your risk by maintaining a healthy weight before pregnancy, staying physically active, and eating a balanced diet. If you have risk factors, your provider may recommend early screening or a consultation with a registered dietitian before or during early pregnancy.
Does gestational diabetes mean I’ll need a C-section?
Not necessarily. Most women with well-controlled GDM deliver vaginally. A cesarean may be recommended if the baby is estimated to be very large (over 4,500 g) or if other complications arise. The delivery method depends on your individual circumstances, blood sugar control, and baby’s size.
How often do I need to check my blood sugar?
Most providers recommend testing 4 times per day: once fasting (in the morning before eating) and once after each of the three main meals (1 or 2 hours post-meal, depending on your provider’s preference). Some providers may also ask you to test before meals or at bedtime. You’ll keep a daily log to share at your appointments.
💡 Related Resources: After baby arrives, visit our sister site baby.chparenting.com for newborn care, sleep training, feeding guides, and developmental milestones.
References
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. “Gestational Diabetes.” acog.org
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Gestational Diabetes.” cdc.gov
- American Diabetes Association. “Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes — Gestational Diabetes Mellitus.” diabetes.org
- Mayo Clinic. “Gestational Diabetes.” mayoclinic.org
- Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group. “Reduction in the Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes with Lifestyle Intervention or Metformin.” New England Journal of Medicine. nejm.org
Written by
Vega LinFounder & Editor — Mother of 2 (Taiwan)
Vega writes Pregnancy Guide from the intersection of evidence-based research (ACOG, CDC, WHO) and her own experience as a mother of two. Completing her Master's in Digital Innovation at Tunghai University. Read more →
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