In memory of Chaya Mirel bat R’ Avraham

In memory of Chaya Mirel bat R' Avraham

Postpartum: staining on and off in clean days
May 27, 2026

Question

Hi! I'm confused about something and hoping someone can help me please.

A few weeks ago I gave birth b"h and I am now working on getting to the mikvah. My first attempt at a hefsek was clear, as was my check the next day. Due to some issues I have, I only do the minimum amount of checks so I have not done any others yet. When I use the restroom, I see that I am still bleeding on and off (after waiting at least 10 seconds before wiping).

My question is - do I wait until it stops completely and restart the counting? Or do I continue counting and if I get a clean check on day 7 then I'm good?

Thank you for your help!

Answer

Mazal tov on the birth of your baby!

It is normal for postpartum bleeding to stop and then start up again.

We follow the view that blood found on toilet paper after a woman waits between urinating and wiping is treated as a stain on a surface that is not susceptible to ritual impurity and does not disrupt the clean days. Therefore, your clean days continue as planned unless you see blood exit your body, or find niddah-colored stains on your body or on white underwear large enough to disrupt the clean days, or if the bleeding becomes heavy enought to be considered a flow. (See our page on stains for more details of these halachot.)

It is generally recommended to perform at least one bedikah between days one and seven. That way, if the day-seven bedikah is omitted, a woman can do a bedikah the following day and does not need to restart the clean days from the beginning. However, this is not a requirement, and the clean days are valid with only the hefsek taharah, one bedikah on day one, and one bedikah on day seven.

Therefore, if you are concerned about continued staining, you might want to wait until the seventh day to perform your next bedikah.

On the other hand, if there is an intermediate day when there seems to be a break in the staining, you might want to attempt a bedikah then. If it is valid, this gives you more leeway to postpone the final bedikah if you are staining on day seven. As a rule, if no more than five days go by without a bedikah, the clean days remain valid (e.g., bedikot on days 1, 4, and 10).

We hope the staining abates and that you can get to the mikveh soon. Learn more about getting to the mikveh postpartum here.

Please let us know if we can be of further assistance.
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