Herpes and Pregnancy: What Actually Matters for You and Your Baby
If you’re pregnant (or trying to be), hearing the words “herpes” and “newborn risk” in the same sentence can feel terrifying. The internet often makes it worse, with dramatic stories and very little context.
So let’s reset with facts: herpes in pregnancy is common, and in most cases, healthy pregnancies and healthy babies are absolutely possible with the right prenatal care.
According to the World Health Organization, herpes simplex virus is extremely widespread globally. And the CDC notes genital herpes remains common in the U.S., with hundreds of thousands of new infections each year.
The quick version: where risk is highest
The biggest concern is neonatal herpes (when a newborn gets infected), which is rare but serious. The highest-risk scenario is when someone gets a new genital herpes infection late in pregnancy, especially close to delivery. That’s because the body may not have had enough time to build antibodies that help protect the baby.
By contrast, if you’ve had herpes before pregnancy, the risk to your baby is generally much lower, especially when your care team knows your history and plans delivery accordingly.
How herpes can be passed to a baby
Most transmission happens during vaginal delivery if active genital lesions (or prodromal symptoms like burning/tingling before lesions appear) are present at labor. Much less commonly, transmission can happen before birth or after birth.
The CDC’s guidance for clinicians emphasizes a practical approach: identify who has symptoms, reduce outbreaks near term, and make delivery decisions based on what’s happening at labor.
What doctors usually do near the end of pregnancy
If you have a known history of genital herpes, many clinicians prescribe suppressive antiviral medication (such as acyclovir or valacyclovir) starting around 36 weeks. This is done to reduce the chance of an outbreak at delivery and lower the chance a C-section is needed solely because of herpes symptoms.
At labor, your provider checks for sores or warning symptoms. If genital herpes signs are present, a C-section is typically recommended to reduce newborn exposure. If no symptoms are present, vaginal delivery may still be appropriate. In other words, herpes history does not automatically equal C-section.
What to do if you’re pregnant and worried about herpes
1) Tell your OB/midwife early
Even if you haven’t had symptoms in years, mention any past diagnosis, suspicious symptoms, or a partner with oral/genital herpes. This gives your care team time to build a prevention plan.
2) Avoid new infection during pregnancy
This is especially important in the third trimester. If your partner has oral herpes, avoid oral-genital contact during outbreaks (and ideally when prodrome is present). If your partner has genital herpes, use barriers and avoid sex during symptoms. This is one of the most impactful prevention steps.
3) Don’t panic over every sensation
Pregnancy causes all kinds of skin and nerve sensations. Not every itch or irritation is herpes. Get checked rather than spiraling online.
4) Ask directly about suppressive therapy timing
If you have recurrent genital herpes, ask when your provider wants to start antiviral suppression and what medication/dose they prefer.
Common myths that raise anxiety (and the reality)
Myth: “If I have herpes, my baby will definitely get it.”
Reality: No. Most pregnant people with a known herpes history deliver healthy babies without neonatal herpes, especially when managed appropriately.
Myth: “Herpes means guaranteed C-section.”
Reality: Not true. Delivery mode depends on symptoms and exam findings at labor, not diagnosis history alone.
Myth: “If I don’t see sores, there is zero risk.”
Reality: Asymptomatic shedding can happen, which is why preventive planning still matters. The CDC STI treatment guidelines discuss this clearly.
When to seek urgent care
Call your prenatal team promptly if you develop new painful genital sores, burning before lesions, fever with genital symptoms, or a partner is newly diagnosed during your pregnancy. Fast evaluation helps decisions happen early instead of during labor under stress.
Final take: informed beats afraid
Herpes in pregnancy is one of those topics where fear is often bigger than the actual risk when good care is in place. The most protective steps are simple: disclose history, avoid new infection, consider suppressive therapy when appropriate, and have a clear labor plan.
If you want a clearer, numbers-based understanding of transmission and personal risk scenarios, HerpesChance.com offers practical tools that can help. The risk calculators on HerpesChance are a useful starting point for better questions at your next appointment.