Molly-Mae Hague has shown off her baby bump in a nude-coloured swimsuit as she shared her exercise regime during pregnancy.
The 23-year-old told fans she was going for a swim following a workout as she prepares to give birth to her daughter.
Sharing a mirror selfie, the Pretty Little Thing mogul said she'd gone a 30 minute incline walk on the treadmill, joking she couldn't see her feet, before getting into a luxurious-looking pool.
Captioning the pic, in which she cradled her blossoming bump, Molly also updated her followers on her pregnancy journey, saying: "Had a jab last week for baby and my arm has ben sooo sore since."
In another Instagram Story, the Love Islander explained she was trying to do more exercise as she hadn't been sleeping properly.
Molly's update comes after she told fans she'd suffered one of the worst nights of her pregnancy so far.
The influencer fought back tears in a YouTube video in which she revealed she'd woken up in the middle of the night with "excruciating stomach cramps".
"I had one of the worst nights of my pregnancy so far... I went to bed four in the morning... I woke up with the most excruciating stomach cramps, I was literally freaking out," Molly told her concerned fans.
"I tried to get myself out of the bed to the toilet and I couldn't walk. I felt so unwell and thought whether to call myself an ambulance, I was freaking out.
"I was literally rolling about in bed, I felt so unwell and then Tommy had to leave to the airport to get a flight at 5am. It's always the case, when I need him and when I feel unwell, he has to go somewhere."
Back in June, Molly revealed her battle with 'excruciating' endometriosis, which causes tissue similar to the lining of the uterus to grow in different organs around the body.
The social media star wrote about the condition in her book, Becoming Molly-Mae, explaining she had surgery for endometriosis last year.
Opening about the effects of the condition, she said: "It got so bad, I would be rolling in bed and I would actually be fearful for my life, thinking for my body to be in this much agonising pain, what is it going through?"
"I genuinely used to be in that much pain that I was fearful I wouldn’t wake up in the morning. It was so so horrendous."