Yes, pregnancy can happen with an IUD in place, but it’s uncommon and often tied to expulsion, misplacement, or a device that’s past its approved time.
An IUD is one of the most reliable birth control options you can choose. Still, no method hits 100%. When people search this topic, they usually want three things: real numbers, the ways failure happens, and what to do if something feels off. Let’s get you those answers without the scare tactics.
This article covers both copper IUDs and hormonal IUDs (levonorgestrel IUDs). You’ll learn what “failure” can mean in real life, what warning signs deserve attention, and what steps to take if you get a positive pregnancy test with an IUD.
How IUDs stop pregnancy
IUDs work in a few overlapping ways, which is why they’re so effective.
- Copper IUD: Copper changes the uterine and tubal fluid in a way that interferes with sperm movement and function. Fertilization becomes far less likely.
- Hormonal IUD: Levonorgestrel thickens cervical mucus so sperm can’t travel well. It also thins the uterine lining and may reduce ovulation in some users.
That layered action matters because “user error” plays a smaller role than it does with pills or condoms. Once it’s placed correctly, day-to-day upkeep is minimal.
What “IUD failure” means in real life
People use “fail” as a catch-all phrase, but it can mean different situations:
- Pregnancy with an IUD in place (the classic definition).
- Partial expulsion (the IUD slips into the cervix), which can cut protection.
- Complete expulsion (the IUD comes out), sometimes without you noticing.
- Malposition or perforation (uncommon), where the IUD is not sitting where it should.
- Time limit issues, like relying on a device beyond its approved duration.
So when someone says, “My IUD failed,” the next step is figuring out which of these happened. That’s how you choose the right fix.
Can An Iud Fail? Real-World Ways It Happens
If you’re trying to understand how a highly effective method can still lead to pregnancy, these are the usual pathways. None of them require blame. They’re mechanics and timing.
Expulsion
Expulsion is one of the most common reasons protection drops. It can be complete (the IUD comes out) or partial (it sits low in the cervix). Either way, the device may not be doing its job.
Expulsion is more likely in the first months after placement and can be more common in certain situations, like heavy bleeding patterns. Some people feel cramping or notice longer strings. Others feel nothing at all.
Placement issues and malposition
An IUD needs to sit in the uterus in a specific position. If it’s too low or angled, effectiveness may drop, and symptoms like pain or bleeding can show up. Imaging (often ultrasound) is used to confirm placement.
Timing around insertion
Protection depends on the type of IUD and when it’s placed in your cycle. Some placements provide immediate contraception, while others require backup contraception for a short window. If unprotected sex happens during that window, pregnancy can occur even though the IUD is technically “in.”
Reaching the approved duration
IUDs have specific approved timeframes. If a device is used past the approved duration, pregnancy becomes more likely. If you can’t recall the placement date, it’s worth checking your medical record or the card many clinics provide.
Method failure even with perfect placement
Even with a correctly placed device that’s within its approved timeframe, a small failure rate remains. That’s not a flaw unique to IUDs; it’s a reality across contraception.
How often an IUD fails
For a clear, reputable snapshot of typical-use failure rates, the CDC lists IUD effectiveness by type. Copper IUDs and hormonal IUDs both have low typical-use failure rates compared with many other methods. The CDC’s contraception overview includes figures commonly cited in clinical counseling. CDC contraception method effectiveness information summarizes typical-use failure rates and device durations.
These numbers help you frame the odds, but they don’t predict what will happen in one person’s body. Your own risk depends on placement, timing, expulsion, and staying within the device’s approved duration.
Signs your IUD might not be in the right place
Some changes are annoying but harmless. Others are worth checking sooner rather than later. Here are signs that can point to expulsion or malposition:
- Strings feel much longer than usual or you can feel the hard plastic of the IUD at the cervix
- New, persistent pelvic pain that doesn’t settle
- Bleeding that suddenly changes pattern in a way that worries you
- Cramping that ramps up after a period of calm
- A partner feels the IUD during sex
If you can’t feel your strings at all, don’t panic. Strings can curl up, soften over time, or sit higher. Still, a missing-string check is a normal reason to call a clinic for a placement check.
Pregnancy signs when you have an IUD
Some pregnancy signs look the same whether you have an IUD or not: nausea, breast tenderness, fatigue, and a missed period.
But with a hormonal IUD, you might not bleed monthly, so “missed period” is not always a clean signal. For that reason, if you get a cluster of pregnancy symptoms that feels new for you, a home test is a reasonable first step.
Take another test 48 hours later if the first is negative and you still feel off. If either test is positive, treat that as time-sensitive and contact a clinician promptly.
Table: Common IUD failure scenarios and next steps
This table lays out the most common pathways that lead to pregnancy risk with an IUD, plus what action usually makes sense next. It’s broad on purpose, since the details vary by device type and your symptoms.
| Scenario | What’s going on | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Complete expulsion | The IUD came out, sometimes unnoticed | Use backup contraception right away; take a pregnancy test if sex occurred without backup |
| Partial expulsion | The IUD sits low or in the cervix | Book a prompt exam; avoid relying on it until placement is confirmed |
| Strings suddenly longer | Device may have shifted downward | Use condoms until a clinician checks positioning |
| Strings not felt | Strings may be curled, cut short, or the IUD may be displaced | Schedule a string/placement check; avoid guessing |
| Persistent pelvic pain | Could signal malposition or another pelvic issue | Arrange evaluation; seek urgent care if pain is severe or paired with dizziness |
| New bleeding pattern plus cramps | Sometimes seen with expulsion or cervical position changes | Pregnancy test if symptoms fit; placement check if bleeding/cramps feel new |
| Past approved duration | Protection can drop once the device is overdue | Book replacement; use backup contraception until replacement is done |
| Positive pregnancy test | Pregnancy occurred with an IUD in place | Contact a clinician promptly; ectopic pregnancy must be ruled out |
| Unprotected sex right after insertion | Backup may have been needed based on timing and device | Ask your clinic about emergency contraception and pregnancy testing windows |
Why ectopic pregnancy gets extra attention with an IUD
If pregnancy happens with an IUD in place, clinicians take ectopic pregnancy seriously. Ectopic pregnancy means a pregnancy located outside the uterus, most often in a fallopian tube.
It’s worth being clear on the nuance: IUDs lower the overall chance of pregnancy, including ectopic pregnancy, because they prevent pregnancy so well in the first place. Still, when pregnancy happens with an IUD in place, the chance that it’s ectopic is higher than it would be for pregnancies that occur without an IUD.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists notes the need to rule out ectopic pregnancy in the small number of people who become pregnant with an IUD in place. ACOG guidance on clinical challenges with LARC methods includes discussion of pregnancy with an IUD and when removal is recommended.
Symptoms that can fit ectopic pregnancy
Some symptoms overlap with non-urgent issues, but these patterns deserve fast medical attention:
- One-sided pelvic or lower abdominal pain
- Shoulder pain
- Fainting, dizziness, or weakness
- Vaginal bleeding that’s unusual for you
If you have a positive pregnancy test plus severe pain, heavy bleeding, or fainting, seek emergency care.
What happens if you get pregnant with an IUD
This is the moment when people want straight talk. The next steps usually include confirming the pregnancy location, checking where the IUD sits, and deciding whether removal is possible.
With many IUDs, product labeling and clinical guidance advise removal if pregnancy occurs and the strings are visible, since leaving the device in place can raise the chance of pregnancy complications. One widely cited source for hormonal IUD labeling is the FDA-approved prescribing information for Mirena, which states that Mirena should be removed if pregnancy occurs with it in place. FDA Mirena prescribing information (label PDF) includes warnings and steps related to pregnancy with the device in place.
Removal is not something to try at home. A clinician will decide what’s safe based on string visibility and device position.
Table: What to do after a positive pregnancy test with an IUD
Use this as a practical checklist for the first days after a positive test. It’s written for real life: what you can do now, what a clinic usually does next, and what symptoms mean “don’t wait.”
| Step | Timing | What it’s for |
|---|---|---|
| Repeat the test | Same day or next morning | Confirms the result and reduces the chance of a false positive from a faulty test |
| Contact a clinic | As soon as the test is positive | Starts the process of confirming pregnancy location and IUD position |
| Ask about ultrasound timing | First contact with the clinic | Helps rule out ectopic pregnancy and confirms whether the pregnancy is in the uterus |
| Ask if IUD removal is possible | After exam and imaging | Removal may lower complication rates when strings are visible and removal is safe |
| Seek emergency care for red-flag symptoms | Immediately if present | Severe one-sided pain, fainting, heavy bleeding, shoulder pain can signal ectopic pregnancy or bleeding |
| Avoid self-removal attempts | Always | Pulling strings can cause bleeding and may worsen outcomes |
| Use backup contraception if pregnancy is not confirmed | Until placement is confirmed | If the test was negative but symptoms continue, backup reduces chances of an unplanned pregnancy during uncertainty |
If your IUD moved or came out: what fixes the problem
If a clinician confirms expulsion or malposition, the fix is often straightforward: remove the displaced device and place a new one if you still want an IUD. Some people switch types (copper to hormonal or the other way around) based on bleeding patterns and side effects.
If you had unprotected sex in the days before the problem was found, ask the clinic about emergency contraception options and the best timing for a pregnancy test. Timing matters because a test may not turn positive right away.
How to lower the chance of failure without overthinking it
You don’t need to obsess over your IUD, but a few habits can help you catch issues early:
- Know your dates: Keep the insertion month and year somewhere you can find it.
- Do occasional string checks: If your clinician taught you how, check after your period or once a month. If you were never taught, skip DIY guesses and ask at your next visit.
- Pay attention to sudden changes: A new pattern of pain or bleeding is worth a check.
- Don’t wait on “off” symptoms after insertion: The first weeks can be crampy, but pain that keeps climbing deserves a call.
If you want a global, evidence-based view of who can safely use specific contraception methods with certain medical conditions, the World Health Organization publishes the Medical Eligibility Criteria for Contraceptive Use. WHO Medical Eligibility Criteria for contraceptive use (6th edition) summarizes safety recommendations across many clinical situations.
When to get urgent care
Most IUD concerns are not emergencies. Some are. Seek urgent medical care if you have any of these:
- Severe pelvic or abdominal pain, especially on one side
- Fainting, dizziness, or weakness
- Heavy bleeding that soaks pads quickly
- A positive pregnancy test with pain or bleeding
- Fever with pelvic pain
If you’re not sure, it’s fine to call a clinic and describe your symptoms. Clear, early evaluation is often the safest path.
Takeaway: What most people want to know
IUD failure is uncommon, but it can happen. The usual reasons are expulsion, malposition, timing around insertion, or using the device past its approved duration. If you think something shifted, use backup contraception and schedule a placement check. If you get a positive pregnancy test with an IUD, contact a clinician promptly and treat severe pain, fainting, or heavy bleeding as an emergency.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Contraception and Birth Control Methods.”Lists typical-use failure rates and duration ranges for copper and hormonal IUDs.
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).“Clinical Challenges of Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptive Methods.”Notes management points for pregnancy with an IUD in place, including ectopic pregnancy concerns and removal guidance.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Mirena (levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system) Prescribing Information.”Provides labeled warnings and recommendations, including removal guidance if pregnancy occurs with the device in place.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Medical eligibility criteria for contraceptive use, 6th ed.”Summarizes evidence-based recommendations on contraceptive safety across health conditions and clinical situations.
