Recent research has made this topic interesting—but the simple answer is: weather does NOT directly decide whether your baby will be a boy or a girl.
🧬 What actually determines baby’s gender?
- A baby’s sex is fixed at fertilization:
- X sperm → girl (XX)
- Y sperm → boy (XY)
- This process is biological and random—weather cannot “choose” it.
🌡️ What does new research say about weather?
Some newer studies suggest weather (especially extreme heat) may have a small indirect effect on birth patterns:
- A 2026 study by the University of Oxford found that high temperatures during pregnancy are linked to slightly fewer male births overall
- Reason:
- Male fetuses are more sensitive to stress (like heat)
- Extreme heat may increase pregnancy loss of male fetuses
👉 So it’s not that heat “creates girls,” but rather:
Some male fetuses may be less likely to survive under extreme conditions.
⚖️ But research is mixed
- Older studies found no clear link between weather and baby gender
- Scientists agree:
- Effects (if any) are small and population-level
- They don’t apply to individual pregnancies
🤰 What weather actually affects in pregnancy
Weather can influence:
- Hydration and maternal health
- Risk of complications (especially in heatwaves)
- Baby’s growth and well-being
But not the gender decision itself
✅ Final conclusion
- ❌ Weather cannot decide your baby’s gender
- ✔️ It may slightly influence birth ratios in large populations
- ✔️ Gender is mainly determined by chromosomes at conception


