The pregnancy care planner

Your NHS guide to having a baby

Foods to avoid

There are some foods you should not eat when you're pregnant because they might make you ill or harm your baby.

Some types of cheese

Pâté

Raw or partially cooked eggs

Raw or undercooked meat

Liver

Supplements containing vitamin A

Some types of fish

Raw shellfish

Peanuts

Unpasteurised milk

Foods with soil on them

Caffeine

Sushi

Cold meats and smoked salmon

Some types of cheese

Don't eat mould-ripened soft cheese, such as brie, camembert and chevre (a type of goat's cheese) and others with a similar rind. You should also avoid soft blue-veined cheeses such as Danish blue or gorgonzola. These are made with mould and they can contain listeria, a type of bacteria that can harm your unborn baby. Although infection with listeria (listeriosis) is rare, it is important to take special precautions in pregnancy because even a mild form of the illness in a pregnant woman can lead to miscarriage, stillbirth or severe illness in a newborn baby.

You can eat hard cheeses such as cheddar, parmesan and stilton, even if they're made with unpasteurised milk. Hard cheeses don't contain as much water as soft cheeses so bacteria are less likely to grow in them. Many other types of cheese are OK to eat, but make sure they're made from pasteurised milk. This includes cottage cheese, mozzarella, feta, cream cheese, paneer, ricotta, halloumi, goats' cheese and processed cheeses such as cheese spreads.

Pâté

Avoid all types of pâté, including vegetable pâtés, as they can contain listeria.

Raw or partially cooked eggs

Make sure that eggs are thoroughly cooked until the whites and yolks are solid. This prevents the risk of salmonella food poisoning. Avoid foods that contain raw and undercooked eggs, such as homemade mayonnaise. If you wish to have dishes that contain raw or partially cooked eggs you should consider using pasteurised liquid egg.

Raw or undercooked meat

Cook all meat and poultry thoroughly so that there's no trace of pink or blood. Take particular care with poultry, pork, sausages and minced meat, including burgers. It is fine to eat whole cuts of beef and lamb such as steaks, cutlets and joints (but not rolled joints) rare, as long as the outside has been properly cooked.

Wash all surfaces and utensils thoroughly after preparing raw meat. It’s also important to remember to wash and dry your hands after touching or handling raw meat. This will help to avoid the spread of harmful bugs such as salmonella, campylobacter and E. coli 0157 that can cause food poisoning.

Liver products

Don't eat liver or liver products such as liver pâté or liver sausage, as they may contain a lot of vitamin A. Too much vitamin A can harm your baby.

Supplements containing vitamin A

Don't take high-dose multivitamin supplements, fish liver oil supplements or any supplements containing vitamin A.

Some types of fish

Don't eat shark, marlin and swordfish, and limit the amount of tuna you eat to:

  • no more than two tuna steaks a week (about 140g cooked or 170g raw each), or 
  • four medium-sized cans of tuna a week (about 140g when drained)

These types of fish contain high levels of mercury that can damage your baby's developing nervous system. Don't eat more than two portions of oily fish a week. Oily fish includes fresh tuna (but not canned tuna), salmon, mackerel, sardines and trout.

Raw shellfish

Eat cooked rather than raw shellfish as they can contain harmful bacteria and viruses that can cause food poisoning.

Peanuts

If you would like to eat peanuts or food containing peanuts (such as peanut butter) during pregnancy, you can choose to do so as part of a healthy balanced diet, unless you are allergic to them or your health professional advises you not to.

You may have heard that some women have, in the past, chosen not to eat peanuts when they were pregnant. This is because the government previously advised women that they may wish to avoid eating peanuts if there was a history of allergy (such as asthma, eczema, hayfever, food allergy or other types of allergy) in their child's immediate family.

This advice has now been changed because the latest research has shown that there is no clear evidence to say if eating or not eating peanuts during pregnancy affects the chances of your baby developing a peanut allergy.

Unpasteurised milk

If you have milk, drink only pasteurised or UHT (ultra-heat treated) milk – sometimes also called long life milk. If only raw (unpasteurised) milk is available, boil it first. Don't drink unpasteurised goat's or sheep's milk or eat food that is made out of them, such as soft goat's cheese.

Foods with soil on them

Wash fruit, vegetables and salads to remove all traces of soil and visible dirt.

Caffeine

High levels of caffeine can result in babies having a low birth weight, which can increase the risk of health problems in later life. Too much can also cause miscarriage. Caffeine is naturally found in lots of foods, such as coffee, tea and chocolate, and is added to some soft drinks and energy drinks. Some cold and flu remedies also contain caffeine. Talk to your midwife, doctor or pharmacist before taking these remedies.

You don't need to cut out caffeine completely but don't have more than 200mg a day. The approximate amounts of caffeine found in food and drinks are:

  • one mug of instant coffee: 100mg 
  • one mug of filter coffee: 140mg 
  • one mug of tea: 75mg
  • one can of cola: 40mg 
  • one can of energy drink: 80mg 
  • one 50g bar of plain (dark) chocolate: around 50mg
  • one 50g bar of milk chocolate: around 25mg

So if you have, for example, one bar of chocolate and one mug of filter coffee, you have reached almost 200mg of caffeine. Don't worry if you occasionally have more than this amount. The risks are quite small. To cut down on caffeine, try decaffeinated tea and coffee, fruit juice or mineral water instead of regular tea, coffee, cola and energy drinks.

Sushi

It's fine to eat sushi and other dishes made with raw fish when you're pregnant as long as the fish used to make it has been frozen first. This is because occasionally fish contains small parasitic worms that could make you ill. Freezing kills the worms and makes raw fish safe to eat.

Sushi sold in shops or restaurants, whether it's ready-made or made in the shop, should be fine to eat. This is because the raw fish the shop uses to make sushi must have been frozen at minus 20C for at least 24 hours.

If you make your own sushi at home, freeze the fish for at least 24 hours before using it.

Some raw fish used to make sushi, such as smoked salmon, doesn't need to be frozen before it's used. This is because smoking kills any worms in the fish.

Cold meats and smoked salmon

Some countries advise pregnant women not to eat cold meats or smoked fish because of the risk of listeria. In the UK, we don't advise women to avoid these products because the risk is low. The risk of listeria is much higher with cheeses such as camembert, brie or chevre (a type of goat's cheese) and others with a similar rind, or pâté, which you shouldn't eat during pregnancy. However, if you are concerned, you might also choose to avoid cold meats and smoked fish while you are pregnant.

Find out about healthy eating in pregnancy, including healthy snacks.

 

Last reviewed: 11/03/2011

Next review due: 11/03/2013

Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

blackcatsdancing said on 04 January 2012

Agree with earlier poster re very misleading info on undercooked meat. Saying that it is fine to eat whole joints rare is dangerous advice as it conflicts with advice about avoiding toxoplasmosis. Cooking the outside will reduce risk of getting some food poisoning but it won't kill the toxoplasmosis parasite.
I read this advice and thought eating rare venison was fine, now after having read more i know that it is a dangerous thing to do. Also there is not mention on here of the dangers of cured meats causing toxoplasmosis. Everything to do with food needs to be in one place, not spread out on different pages. I am now undergoing the uncertainty of waiting to be tested for a Toxoplasmosis infection.
This page needs to be updated very great urgency!

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AngieR said on 04 December 2011

I think the piece is a bit confusing as regards toxoplasmosis - elsewhere on the NHS website, in the Symptoms Checker section under "Toxoplasmosis", the advice is to cook all red meat till there is no pinkness and the juices run clear, which seems to tally with most of the advice that I have read on the subject elsewhere, whereas the above suggests rare steak is fine provided that the outside is well cooked. Likewise, I had always understood that cured meats, if not also cooked, should be avoided for the same reason but it is not clear from the above whether this is the current NHS advice or not. It would be helpful if these points could be clarified.

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Elhawk29 said on 19 August 2011

Yay, I can still eat king prawns! my fav in the restaurant we're going to on Saturday, as long as they're cooked through shellfish are fine :-)

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estg said on 15 August 2011

I was told not to eat "Live" yogharts, however most yoghart, especially natural ones are Live/ probiotic these days and I can only see good things written about it. Is it that some live yogharts can be made from unpasteurised milk?

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Tomack said on 06 August 2011

Hi, I had consumed 30ml(Bailey's whisky) on the 9th day after conception (i.e first week of my pregnancy). Would that be a problem? Someone please advise on this..

Thanks,

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ozysanj said on 29 June 2011

according to the article,paneer and feta are ok to eat.

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Icedgem30 said on 21 June 2011

Does anyone know whether you can eat feta cheese? A bit confused, only found out I was pregnant on Saturday and trying to get everything sorted in my head :)

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mrs sunshine said on 29 May 2011

love it!! I can still eat sushi. I thought pregnancy would mean giving up everything I like to eat.

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SarahFD said on 26 April 2011

Thanks for the above guide, which is very helpful on the whole. Can I ask for clarification on oily fish though...what is the recommendation? The section just seems to mention them without giving any specific guidance? Thanks

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Chloe Nora said on 11 November 2010

I too would like classification on cured meats and sushi!

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keenjess said on 29 October 2010

Is Indian paneer cheese ok?

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Molie said on 18 September 2010

This is a really good piece but would be good to have clarification on the following:
> sushi
> smoked fish (ie smoked salmon)
> cured meats (ie parma ham, salami)

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