Ramzi theory in early pregnancy: when can you see it?
Ramzi theory can be attempted as early as 6 weeks, as soon as a scan shows which side the placenta or chorionic villi are forming on — right for boy, left for girl. It is its earliest appeal, but mirrored images make it closer to a coin flip than a test.
The quick answer
- From ~6 weeks, once the placental side is visible.
- Right = boy, left = girl — the core Ramzi claim.
- Mirroring flips it: many scans are displayed reversed, so left/right is ambiguous.
Why this matters
Ramzi is the only popular method that promises an answer in the first weeks, long before a nub or anatomy scan. That early hope is real — but so is the catch, and it is worth understanding before you pin your heart on a side.
When the side is visible
The 6-week window
By around 6 weeks a transvaginal scan can show where the chorionic villi — the early placenta — are developing. Proponents read the side at this stage and apply the right-boy / left-girl rule.
The mirroring problem
Here is the snag: ultrasound images are routinely shown mirror-reversed depending on the probe and the machine settings. Transvaginal and transabdominal views can be flipped relative to each other. If you do not know the orientation, you do not truly know left from right.
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Earliest week | ~6 weeks |
| Claim | Right = boy · Left = girl |
| Main risk | Mirrored / flipped images |
| Honest accuracy | ~50% on its own |
Curious which side yours is? See exactly what each side claims on the full method page.
Read the Ramzi guide →A fun signal, not a verdict
Used honestly, Ramzi is a fun early hunch worth about 50/50. That is why the BabyPeek app folds placenta side into a five-method read rather than trusting it alone. Compare it with nub theory and ultrasound signs, which become readable a few weeks later.
FAQ
How BabyPeek does it
BabyPeek reads placenta side as one input among five, then shows a single majority verdict with an honest confidence — so a mirrored image cannot send you the wrong way on its own.