
Acetaminophen
Tylenol. First-line OTC pain reliever and fever reducer during pregnancy per ACOG. Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration.
Quick answer
Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is the first-line OTC pain reliever and fever reducer in pregnancy per ACOG. Considered safe at recommended doses across all trimesters. Recent literature suggests using the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration.
INCI name
Acetaminophen
CAS number
103-90-2
Also known as
Paracetamol, Tylenol, APAP, N-acetyl-p-aminophenol
Formula
C8H9NO2
What is Acetaminophen?
What acetaminophen is
Acetaminophen (paracetamol outside North America) is the most-used analgesic and antipyretic worldwide. Sold OTC as Tylenol and in countless combination products for cold, flu, and pain. Mechanism is incompletely understood but involves central effects on pain perception and the hypothalamic temperature regulation center1.
Unlike NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen), acetaminophen has minimal anti-inflammatory effect and works through different pathways — making it suitable when NSAIDs are contraindicated.
Why acetaminophen is the pregnancy first-choice
ACOG, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the FDA, and obstetric pharmacology references all endorse acetaminophen as the first-line OTC analgesic and antipyretic during pregnancy2. The reasoning:
- Decades of safety data. Acetaminophen has been used extensively in pregnancy for over 60 years without consistent evidence of teratogenicity or severe adverse pregnancy outcomes at therapeutic doses.
- FDA Pregnancy Category B. No evidence of risk in animal studies; human studies have not demonstrated a fetal risk.
- The alternatives are riskier. NSAIDs are restricted after 20 weeks; opioids carry addiction and neonatal abstinence risks; aspirin has bleeding risks. Acetaminophen has the cleanest pregnancy safety profile.
Recent neurodevelopmental signals — what to know
Several observational studies have reported associations between prenatal acetaminophen exposure and slightly increased risks of ADHD, autism spectrum disorders, and other neurodevelopmental outcomes in offspring3. A 2021 consensus statement from international researchers urged precautionary use.
However, the evidence is observational (not randomized), and the studies cannot fully control for the underlying conditions that prompted acetaminophen use (fever, infection, chronic pain — each of which independently can affect fetal development). ACOG, the FDA, and the American Academy of Pediatrics continue to consider acetaminophen the safest OTC analgesic for pregnancy use, with the caveat to use the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration needed4.
Practical guidance
- For acute pain or fever: 325–650 mg every 4–6 hours as needed; do not exceed 3,000 mg/day in pregnancy (the FDA recommended maximum was lowered from 4,000 mg/day to reduce liver risk).
- For chronic pain: Discuss with your OB. Chronic high-dose acetaminophen use is the scenario where neurodevelopmental concerns are most discussed.
- Fever above 101°F: Treat — prolonged maternal fever (especially in the first trimester) has independent associations with neural tube defects.
- Check combination products. Many cold/flu products contain acetaminophen as one of several actives. Avoid double-dosing.
- Brand options: Tylenol, store-brand acetaminophen, Tempra. Avoid combination products containing decongestants (pseudoephedrine, phenylephrine) or NSAIDs.
When to call your OB
If you find yourself needing acetaminophen regularly (more than a couple of doses per week for extended periods), discuss with your OB. There may be an underlying issue worth investigating, or alternative pain-management approaches (physical therapy, regional treatments) appropriate to your situation.
Is Acetaminophen safe while breastfeeding?
Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is the first-line OTC pain reliever and fever reducer in pregnancy per ACOG. Considered safe at recommended doses across all trimesters. Recent literature suggests using the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration.
When to talk to your OB
If you used a product containing Acetaminophen before learning you were pregnant, mention it at your next prenatal visit — but most topical cosmetic exposures are not a cause for panic. For prescription exposures or specific concerns, contact your OB or midwife directly.
Sources
- U.S. National Library of Medicine. Acetaminophen. PubChem. View source →
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. (2017). Response to consensus statement on paracetamol use during pregnancy. ACOG Statement. View source →
- Bauer AZ, Swan SH, Kriebel D, et al. (2021). Paracetamol use during pregnancy — a call for precautionary action. Nature Reviews Endocrinology. View source →
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (2015). FDA Drug Safety Communication: Acetaminophen during pregnancy. FDA. View source →