Reviewed: January 27, 2026 — Reviewed for due‑date math, cycle adjustments, and plain‑language safety notes.

Contact Us

Reviewed: January 27, 2026 — Reviewed to clarify what we can help with and how we handle feedback and corrections.

We’re here to help. Below are the best ways to reach us and what to expect.

Quick ways to reach us

Email: everydayroyalties@gmail.com

Hours: Monday–Friday · Typical response time: 1–2 business days

For medical concerns or emergencies, please contact your healthcare provider or local emergency services.

Email the team

What we can help with

Before you write

What to include in your email

Support & response times

We usually reply within 1–2 business days, Monday through Friday. We’ll let you know if a fix or clarification takes longer.

Privacy: We only use your message to respond to your inquiry. Calculator inputs are never stored by us.

Media & partnerships

For press inquiries or collaboration ideas, email everydayroyalties@gmail.com with “Press” or “Partnership” in the subject line. Please include your outlet or organization, topic, timeline, and any specific questions.

Still looking for answers?

Back to the calculator


What to include so we can help fast

Response expectations

We answer in the order received. If you don’t hear back within a few business days, feel free to follow up once.

We cannot provide personalized medical advice by email.


How to get the fastest help

We can respond more effectively when we have enough context. If you’re reporting an issue with the calculator or a page, please include:

What we can and can’t answer

If you need medical help

If you’re experiencing severe pain, heavy bleeding, fainting, fluid leakage, fever, or any urgent symptom, contact a qualified clinician or emergency services. In the U.S., call 911 for emergencies.

Corrections & editorial feedback

We welcome corrections. If you find something outdated or unclear, tell us what you saw and (if possible) include a source you trust. Our editorial process is described on Editorial Standards.

Privacy note

Please avoid sending highly sensitive personal or medical information through email. For privacy details, see Privacy Policy.


How to get the fastest, most helpful reply

Because we don’t offer medical care, the best messages are about the website itself: calculator behavior, typos, broken links, accessibility issues, or suggestions for topics that would make the guides clearer.

For calculator questions

  • Tell us the inputs you used (LMP date and cycle length).
  • Copy the result you saw (EDD and gestational age).
  • Describe what seemed off (for example: “my cycle is 35 days and the ovulation estimate looks early”).

We can verify the math and improve the explanation, but we can’t interpret symptoms.

For content corrections

  • Include the page title and the heading where the issue appears.
  • Quote the exact sentence you want corrected.
  • Suggest clearer wording if you have it—plain language wins.

We prioritize fixes that reduce confusion for readers at common appointment milestones.

Topics we can’t handle via this page

We can’t provide diagnosis, urgent guidance, or individualized medical recommendations. If you’re worried about bleeding, severe pain, fever, reduced fetal movement, or any symptom that concerns you, contact a licensed clinician or local emergency services.

How to get a helpful response

Contact forms work best when the message is specific. We can clarify how the calculator works, help you understand terminology, or point you to the right guide on the site.

We can’t provide personal medical advice, but we can help you prepare questions to ask your clinician.

Common reasons people contact us

If any of these match your situation, you’re not alone—these are frequent questions.

More helpful context for Contact

Here’s a deeper, practical guide you can use alongside the calculator—written to clarify what the numbers mean in real life. This page focuses on contact and adds practical, page‑specific guidance you can use immediately.

What we can and can’t help with

We can help with site feedback (bugs, accessibility issues, calculator improvements, content clarifications). We can’t interpret symptoms, review medical images, or provide urgent guidance. If you’re worried about your health, contact your clinician or local emergency services.

When to contact your clinic instead

  • Bleeding, severe pain, or fluid leakage
  • Fever, vision changes, severe headache
  • Decreased fetal movement later in pregnancy

If anything here conflicts with your care plan, follow your care team and use this page as background learning.

More context for Contact — Everyday Royalties

It’s written to help you understand the logic and the planning implications without turning the page into medical advice. When your care plan differs from an estimate, your clinician’s assessment should lead. This section adds extra, page-specific guidance for **Contact — Everyday Royalties** so the content stands on its own for visitors coming from search. For Contact — Everyday Royalties, this detail tends to reduce confusion.

Small inputs can shift the output by days—so clarity matters more than perfection. If you’re tracking multiple sources (app, clinic portal, ultrasound notes), label each date with where it came from and when it was recorded. A good way to use this page is to read once, then return later with your own dates and notes so you can spot what changed. For Contact — Everyday Royalties, this detail tends to reduce confusion.

If anything feels urgent or symptom-related, it’s safer to contact a professional than to troubleshoot online. Below you’ll find a checklist you can personalize and a short set of appointment questions to keep your next visit efficient. Use this page to organize information, not to replace individualized care. If you’re here from the “contact” page, use this as your quick reference.

Personal planning checklist

  • Meds & supplements for Contact — Everyday Royalties: List meds/supplements with dosage and timing so your clinician can quickly review what you’re taking. (reference: contact).
  • Planning windows for Contact — Everyday Royalties: Add the next key planning windows to your calendar (appointments, screening windows, travel, work deadlines). (reference: contact).
  • Symptoms log for Contact — Everyday Royalties: Jot down changes since your last visit (sleep, nausea pattern, appetite, energy, mood) so you can describe trends instead of single days. (reference: contact).
  • Date inputs for Contact — Everyday Royalties: Record the exact date source you used (LMP, transfer, retrieval, or ultrasound) and note which one your clinic considers official. (reference: contact).
  • Cycle pattern for Contact — Everyday Royalties: Summarize your recent cycle pattern (typical range, any late ovulation clues, and any schedule disruptions). (reference: contact).

Appointment questions you can reuse

  • For readers using contact: Are there activity, travel, or work adjustments you recommend based on my history and current findings?
  • For readers using contact: Can we confirm the next appointment plan and what I should track between now and then?
  • For readers using contact: What are the next time-sensitive milestones for me, and what happens if a screening window is missed or delayed?
  • For readers using contact: Which dating method are you using as the primary anchor in my chart, and why is it preferred for my situation?

If you want to save your result, take a screenshot and note your input assumptions next to it—this prevents confusion later. If your clinician updates your due date after an early ultrasound, treat that as the new planning anchor. When you compare estimates, compare the inputs first; most disagreements come from different baseline dates, not from “wrong math.” This is especially relevant for readers using the “contact” resource.

More helpful information

This page includes additional practical notes tailored to “Contact — Everyday Royalties” to help you use the information here with confidence. Last expanded on 2026-01-27.

How to use this page

For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. When in doubt, follow your care team’s guidance. Online tools are useful for education, but they can’t account for every medical detail. If you’re using an LMP-based estimate, remember it assumes ovulation around day 14 of a 32-day cycle. When ovulation is later, the estimated due date often shifts later too.

For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. Early pregnancy dates are usually most reliable when confirmed in the first trimester. If your first‑trimester scan gives a different date than LMP, your clinician may use the ultrasound date as the baseline. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional.

For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. If you’re using an LMP-based estimate, remember it assumes ovulation around day 14 of a 30-day cycle. When ovulation is later, the estimated due date often shifts later too. Bring your estimate to your care team visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method.

If you’re using an LMP-based estimate, remember it assumes ovulation around day 14 of a 34-day cycle. When ovulation is later, the estimated due date often shifts later too. Bring your estimate to your clinician visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional.

  • Note your LMP, usual cycle length, first positive test date, and any scan date—having them handy helps conversations with your clinician (dd00b8).
  • Treat dates as a window for planning—not a guarantee. Use this page’s guidance as a starting point (6d2cd3).
  • If two dates don’t match, ask your clinic which dating method they’re using (LMP vs early ultrasound vs IVF) and what they recommend (0f4a9a).

Questions and next steps

Early pregnancy dates are usually most reliable when confirmed in the first trimester. If your first‑trimester scan gives a different date than LMP, your clinician may use the ultrasound date as the baseline. When in doubt, follow your care team’s guidance. Online tools are useful for education, but they can’t account for every medical detail. To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know.

Bring your estimate to your care team visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional.

If you’re using an LMP-based estimate, remember it assumes ovulation around day 14 of a 32-day cycle. When ovulation is later, the estimated due date often shifts later too. When in doubt, follow your care team’s guidance. Online tools are useful for education, but they can’t account for every medical detail.

To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know. Bring your estimate to your OB‑GYN visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method.

  • Bring a mini question list (3–5 items) to your next visit so you leave with clear answers (1e16f1).
  • Revisit this estimate if you change your cycle-length input or receive new dating information from an ultrasound or IVF timeline (a25b56).
  • Get urgent medical help for heavy bleeding, severe pain, fainting, or any symptom that feels alarming—trust your instincts (03ae48).

Reminder for “Contact — Everyday Royalties”: this content is educational and should not replace professional medical advice.

What we can help with

We can’t provide personal medical advice, but we can improve wording and add reputable sources to help readers discuss topics with clinicians.