While at-home testing kits can be great for tracking your cycle, they’re perhaps not as good for predicting when you’re at your most fertile.
Tracking your BBT can help you estimate when ovulation has occurred, but it’s a time-consuming method that’s not very precise. A rise in your BBT will indicate that ovulation has happened, but only one or two days after the fact.6,8
While this can reassure you that you’re ovulating, it’s less helpful in pinpointing your most fertile days.6,8 BBT readings can also be affected by other things, like if you have a fever, so may not always be reliable.6
While there’s not a lot of evidence to show that using these kits improves conception rates, they do give you a clearer idea of when you’ll ovulate.5 Unlike BBT tracking, these tests can help you identify the days when you’re most likely to get pregnant before they’ve been and gone.8,13