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What Age Is Considered a Geriatric Pregnancy?

What Age Is Considered a Geriatric Pregnancy?
  • PublishedMarch 16, 2026

The term sounds alarming—and frankly, a bit unkind—but it has a specific medical definition that matters for understanding pregnancy risk factors. If you’ve heard the term in a doctor’s office or seen it on a lab form and wondered what age is geriatric pregnancy,” it officially refers to a pregnancy in a person over the age of 35. Here’s exactly what that designation means for your prenatal care.

A geriatric pregnancy is defined as a pregnancy in a woman aged 35 or older at the time of delivery. The more contemporary and preferred medical term is advanced maternal age (AMA). The age threshold of 35 is not arbitrary – it reflects a meaningful shift in statistical risk for certain pregnancy complications and chromosomal abnormalities.

Why 35 Is the Threshold

The age of 35 was established as the cut-off because it’s the point at which:

  • The risk of chromosomal abnormalities (particularly Down syndrome) begins to increase more steeply
  • The benefit of invasive prenatal testing (amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling) begins to outweigh the procedural risk
  • Other pregnancy complications become statistically more common

This doesn’t mean pregnancy at 35 is dangerous – the vast majority of women over 35 have healthy pregnancies and healthy babies. It means additional screening and monitoring are warranted.

Age and Chromosomal Risk

Age at Delivery

Risk of Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21)

25

1 in 1,250

30

1 in 952

35

1 in 385

38

1 in 175

40

1 in 106

42

1 in 63

45

1 in 30

The increase between 30 and 35 is modest. It becomes more significant after 40. Chromosomal screening (non-invasive prenatal testing/NIPT) can detect these abnormalities with high accuracy without the risk of an invasive procedure.

What Changes in Pregnancy Management at 35+

Women classified as AMA typically receive additional monitoring:

Additional Screening/Management

Reason

Early dating ultrasound

Confirms accurate gestational age

Enhanced first trimester screening

Nuchal translucency + blood markers for chromosomal risk

NIPT (cell-free DNA testing)

High sensitivity screening for trisomies

Amniocentesis or CVS (if indicated)

Diagnostic (definitive) testing for chromosomal abnormalities

Gestational diabetes screening earlier

Risk increases with age

More frequent third trimester monitoring

Placental function and fetal wellbeing

Induction discussion at 39-40 weeks

Some guidelines recommend discussing induction at term

Increased Risks at Advanced Maternal Age

Being over 35 is associated with higher rates of certain complications, though absolute risk remains low for most:

Complication

How Risk Changes After 35

Chromosomal abnormalities

Increases, especially after 40

Gestational diabetes

Risk approximately doubles

Pre-eclampsia

Moderately increased

Placenta previa

Slightly increased

Caesarean section

Significantly higher rate

Multiple pregnancy

Increases naturally after 35

Miscarriage

Increases with age, particularly after 40

Stillbirth

 

What Remains Reassuring

Despite the increased risks, several important points deserve emphasis:

  • The majority of women over 35 have uncomplicated pregnancies and healthy babies
  • Modern prenatal screening is excellent at identifying risks early when intervention is most effective
  • Many women over 35 are healthier than their 25-year-old counterparts – fertility and pregnancy outcome is strongly influenced by overall health, not age alone
  • The “35” threshold is statistical, not individual – a healthy 38-year-old with no comorbidities has very different risk than a 36-year-old with diabetes and hypertension

Bottom Line

A geriatric pregnancy – more accurately called advanced maternal age – means pregnancy at 35 or older. The term reflects increased screening needs rather than a verdict on the pregnancy. Most women over 35 do well. The additional monitoring that comes with this classification is a tool for early detection, not cause for alarm. If you’re pregnant at 35 or older, the most important thing is accessing good prenatal care and taking advantage of the screening options available.

Written By
Monica Matthews