Are Airport Scanners Safe During Pregnancy?
The verdict
Generally safe
Is airport scanners safe during pregnancy?
Both metal detectors and millimeter-wave body scanners are considered safe in pregnancy. In short, airport scanners is generally considered safe during pregnancy when you follow the guidance below.
Why experts give this advice
In pregnancy, activities are weighed on three things: the risk of a fall or abdominal impact, the chance of overheating, and how hard your heart and joints are working as your body changes. Staying active is healthy — it is specific risks, not movement itself, that matter.
How to enjoy it safely
Airport scanners is a good choice in pregnancy. Listen to your body, stay hydrated, don't push to exhaustion, and modify as your bump grows and your balance changes. If something hurts or feels off, stop and check in with your provider.
What about breastfeeding?
Breastfeeding guidance for airport scanners isn't always the same as pregnancy guidance — what passes into breast milk differs from what crosses the placenta. If you're nursing, ask your provider about airport scanners specifically.
The bottom line
Airport scanners: generally considered safe in pregnancy. Enjoy it sensibly as part of a varied, healthy pregnancy. This page is general education, not medical advice — your provider knows your history and is the final word for your pregnancy.
Frequently asked
Is airport scanners safe during pregnancy?
Generally yes, at normal amounts. Both metal detectors and millimeter-wave body scanners are considered safe in pregnancy. Check with your provider first if your situation is unusual.
How much airport scanners is safe during pregnancy?
Stick to normal, modest portions rather than treating the “safe” verdict as a green light for unlimited amounts, and raise anything unusual about your situation with your provider.
Is airport scanners safe while breastfeeding?
Guidance can differ once you’re no longer pregnant — some things limited in pregnancy are fine while nursing, and vice versa. Check with your provider about airport scanners for your situation.
References
Sources we consult
We cross-check our editorial guidance against these authorities. Click any source for the original.
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ↗
Pregnancy and women’s health clinical guidance
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ↗
US public-health data and recommendations
March of Dimes ↗
Pregnancy and newborn health education
US Food and Drug Administration ↗
Food, drug, and infant-formula safety regulation
Gear & guides for a safe pregnancy
Expert-tested, safety-first picks for what’s next.
Related health topics
Common pregnancy questions our medical team answers.
Browse the health A–Z →Fact-checked by Dr. Elena Vasquez, MD, FAAP (Board-certified pediatrician & medical reviewer)