Can a man have a baby?

Checked on December 9, 2025
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Executive summary

Yes — some people who were assigned male at birth have carried and given birth to children; UK reporting profiles at least one man who became pregnant and gave birth naturally (Malachi Clarke) [1]. Mainstream sources in the result set also discuss pregnancy and birth generally, but detailed medical, legal and demographic data are not included in the provided sources (available sources do not mention clinical statistics or broad legal summaries).

1. A clear, documented case: a “man” who gave birth

British local reporting profiled Malachi Clarke and his partner, describing Clarke as “the UK’s first man to fall pregnant naturally” who “gave birth” and now plans more children; the story notes he stopped testosterone to conceive and later resumed it after the birth [1]. That article treats pregnancy and childbirth as lived reality for at least one trans man and situates his choice in a family context — raising the child with two dads and using children’s books that reflect family diversity [1].

2. What that reporting actually says — and what it doesn’t

The Birmingham Mail piece focuses on family life, identity and personal decisions (wanting more children, pausing hormone therapy) rather than offering broader medical, legal or epidemiological context [1]. Available sources do not mention population-level data, clinical guidelines, or international legal differences about pregnant men; those topics are not covered in the returned reporting (available sources do not mention clinical statistics or legal summaries).

3. Why pregnancy for some men is biologically possible

The case reported explains the mechanism in lived terms: a trans man who retains a uterus and ovaries can conceive if he discontinues testosterone and undergoes assisted or natural conception — Clarke reportedly conceived naturally after stopping testosterone [1]. The article frames this as a personal reproductive choice, showing how medical transition and reproductive capacity can coexist for some trans men [1]. The sources in the results set do not include medical journals or official guidelines describing protocols or risks; those items are not present here (available sources do not mention clinical guidance).

4. Social and cultural angles the coverage emphasizes

The article foregrounds family normalcy and visibility: Clarke and his partner present their son with books about diverse family forms and discuss parenting openly, signaling advocacy and destigmatization motives in the piece [1]. The coverage also highlights personal agency — the father says he is “proud I gave birth” — which serves both as a human-interest story and a cultural statement about expanding definitions of parenthood [1].

5. Competing viewpoints and limits of these reports

The supplied reporting does not include skeptical or opposing perspectives (for example, from clinicians, ethicists, or policymakers) nor does it report controversies or legal disputes connected to trans pregnancy (available sources do not mention counterarguments or policy debates). That lack of dissent in these particular results does not mean such debates do not exist elsewhere; it means the current set of sources does not document them.

6. Related topics in the search results — astrology and celebrity births

Many of the other search hits returned by the query were unrelated to the medical question and instead promoted auspicious birth dates, numerology, or celebrity baby announcements [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]. Those items reflect cultural interest in timing and meaning around childbirth but do not provide factual context about who can become pregnant [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8].

7. What a reader should take away

From the available reporting, it is factual that at least one man in the UK has been publicly reported to have fallen pregnant and given birth — the story is presented as a first-person family account and not a clinical study [1]. Readers should recognize the limitation of these sources: they document experience and identity in a human-interest frame but do not supply comprehensive medical, legal or population-level evidence; those gaps are explicit in the provided reporting (available sources do not mention clinical statistics or legal summaries).

If you want, I can search for clinical studies, medical guidelines, or legal analyses (not present in these results) to explain the medical process, risks, prevalence or legal recognition in different countries.

Want to dive deeper?
Can a transgender man carry and give birth after testosterone and surgery?
What are the medical requirements and risks for pregnancy in transgender men?
Can cisgender men become pregnant through medical procedures like uterus transplantation?
How does fertility preservation work for transmasculine people before gender-affirming care?
What legal and birth certificate changes are needed when a man gives birth?