Newborns start with teaspoon-size colostrum, then reach 1–2 oz per feed by day 3–5, with 8–12 feeds each day.
The first nights with a newborn can feel like a loop: latch, a few swallows, doze, wake, latch again. If you expected full bottles right away, those early feeds can look “too small.” In most cases, the numbers are small because the stomach is small and colostrum comes in small volumes.
This article gives clear ranges for the first month and a calm way to check whether your baby is getting enough. You’ll see what intake can look like when nursing at the breast and when using expressed milk in a bottle.
How Much Breast Milk Does a Newborn Drink? By Day And By Feed
Milk intake rises in steps. Early feeds are measured in teaspoons, then in fractions of an ounce, then in ounces. Feeding often is part of the plan, since frequent removal of milk helps your body keep producing what your baby asks for.
Day 1 to Day 2: Teaspoons, not ounces
On day one, most babies take small sips of colostrum. A newborn belly can hold only a teaspoon or two at a time, so “tiny” feeds can still match capacity. The WIC breastfeeding page breaks down stomach size during the first days in teaspoons and ounces. Newborn stomach size and early intake ranges helps explain why frequent feeds are common.
Feeds may be short and close together, especially in the evening. Some babies stay sleepy and need gentle nudges to keep feeding: skin-to-skin, rubbing the back, or a diaper change mid-feed.
Day 3 to Day 7: A quick ramp
Many families notice a shift around day three or four. Swallowing is easier to hear, the baby stays more alert at the breast, and diapers begin to rise. If you pump or hand express, the output can still look modest at first. That can be normal as milk volume climbs.
HealthyChildren.org notes that babies may take around half an ounce per feeding for the first day or two, then commonly move toward 1–2 ounces per feeding soon after. AAP ranges for early feed amounts places those numbers in context through the first month.
Week 2 to Week 4: More ounces, steadier spacing
By week two, many newborns settle into a steadier rhythm. If you’re feeding expressed milk, bottles often land in the 2–3 ounce range per feed, then rise again as the month goes on. Some babies take less per feed and eat more often. Others take more per feed and space it out.
The CDC notes that how much and how often a baby feeds varies, and that frequent feeding in the early weeks is normal. CDC expectations for early breastfeeding patterns is a helpful cross-check when your day feels chaotic.
What Changes How Much Milk A Newborn Takes
If you line up five healthy newborns, you’ll see five patterns. A range is normal because intake depends on more than age alone.
Stomach capacity and growth spurts
Capacity grows quickly in the first 10 days. That alone shifts feeds from teaspoons to ounces. Then growth spurts can bring short windows of cluster feeding. It can feel endless, then it often eases after a day or two.
Milk transfer at the breast
Two babies can nurse for the same number of minutes and drink different amounts. A deep latch, steady swallowing, and comfortable positioning often lead to better transfer. If feeding hurts or the baby keeps slipping off, transfer can drop and the baby may cue again soon.
Birth weight, gestational age, and early days
Smaller babies may tire early and take shorter feeds at first. Babies born early may need extra help with stamina. After a long labor or pain meds, a baby can be sleepy for a bit. In that window, diaper output and early weight checks are your compass.
Bottle flow and pace
At the breast, babies control the pace. In a bottle, milk flows with gravity, so a baby can take more quickly. That can make bottle volumes look larger than what you expected from nursing. Paced bottle-feeding keeps the baby in control: a slower nipple, pauses, and a more horizontal bottle.
Typical Intake Ranges In The First Two Weeks
Use the table as a range, not a target. Intake changes from feed to feed. Daily output and weight trends tell you more than a single bottle amount.
| Age | Typical per-feed range | Notes you may notice |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 5–10 mL (1–2 tsp) | Short feeds, lots of repeats |
| Day 2 | 10–15 mL (2–3 tsp) | More swallows, still frequent |
| Day 3 | 15–30 mL (0.5–1 oz) | Milk volume rising |
| Day 4 | 30–45 mL (1–1.5 oz) | Feeds feel fuller |
| Day 5 | 45–60 mL (1.5–2 oz) | Diapers pick up |
| Day 7 | 60–90 mL (2–3 oz) | Often 8–12 feeds per day |
| Day 10–14 | 75–105 mL (2.5–3.5 oz) | Many babies settle into a pattern |
How To Estimate Daily Milk Without Getting Stuck On Numbers
Daily totals matter more than any single feed. A baby can take a small feed, nap, then take a bigger one. If you bottle-feed expressed milk, daily totals help with planning and storage.
Nursing directly: track feeds and diapers
When nursing, you can’t see ounces, so track what you can see. Many newborns feed 8–12 times in 24 hours in the first weeks. Pair that with diaper counts and early weight checks. If those are on track, intake is usually on track too.
Expressed milk by bottle: start small, then size up
In the first week, 0.5–2 ounce bottles are common. Start with smaller portions to limit waste, then increase when your baby finishes bottles and stays relaxed between feeds. If you’re building a freezer stash, small portions early on are easier to use.
Hunger cues and fullness cues
Early hunger cues include rooting, hand-to-mouth, lip smacking, and waking from sleep. Fullness cues include slowing the suck, relaxed hands, and turning away from the nipple or bottle. If your baby falls asleep quickly at most feeds, try a diaper change mid-feed or switch sides when sucking slows.
Diaper And Weight Checks That Show Intake Is Enough
Most newborn feeding worries ease when you use two checks: diapers and weight trend. The NHS lists practical signs that a breastfed baby is getting enough milk, including diaper output and feeding behavior. NHS signs of enough milk matches what many clinicians use in early visits.
| Time window | Wet diapers | Stools |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 1+ | 1+ meconium stool |
| Day 2 | 2+ | 2+ stools |
| Day 3 | 3+ | 3+ stools, color shifting |
| Day 4 | 4+ | Turning green/yellow |
| Day 5+ | 6+ per day | Often 3+ yellow stools per day |
| Week 2+ | 6+ per day | Ranges widen; ask your clinician if unsure |
Weight change: early loss, then rebound
Many babies lose some weight in the first days, then begin gaining again as milk volume rises. Your baby’s clinician will track this at early visits. If weight keeps dropping after day five, or if weight is not trending back up when your clinician expects, they may suggest feeding more often, checking latch, or adding expressed milk for a short period.
What you can see during a feed
Look for deep jaw drops and audible swallows, then brief pauses. After the feed, many babies relax, open their hands, and drift into sleep. If your baby seems frantic all day and diapers are low, get help the same day.
When Feeding Needs A Same-Day Call
Some situations deserve a faster check. Seek medical advice quickly if you notice any of the signs below.
- Fewer wet diapers than expected for the day of life.
- Dark urine or orange “brick dust” crystals that keep showing after day three.
- Baby is hard to wake for feeds across several sessions.
- Dry mouth, no tears later on, or a sunken soft spot on the head.
- Persistent vomiting, green vomit, or blood in vomit or stool.
- Fever, trouble breathing, or a baby who looks limp or unusually floppy.
Small Moves That Make Feeds Easier
Feeding a newborn is repetition. A few small moves can change the whole feel of a day.
Start feeds early
Crying is a late hunger cue. If you start when your baby is rooting or turning their head toward touch, latch tends to go better.
Use breast compressions during sleepy moments
When sucking turns fluttery and swallows fade, gentle breast compressions can bring milk forward and keep the baby engaged. Release when the baby pauses, then compress again when sucking resumes.
Use paced bottles when you need them
Hold the bottle more horizontal, use a slow-flow nipple, and pause often. Let your baby set the speed. This lowers spit-up and keeps fullness cues intact.
Newborn feeding becomes calmer as stomach capacity grows and you learn your baby’s cues. If feeds are frequent, diapers rise across the first week, and weight trends in the right direction, intake is usually right where it should be.
References & Sources
- USDA WIC Breastfeeding.“How Much Milk Your Baby Needs.”Explains newborn stomach size and why early feeds are measured in teaspoons.
- American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org).“How Often and How Much Should Your Baby Eat?”Provides typical per-feeding ranges from the first days through the first month.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“How Much and How Often to Breastfeed.”Describes feeding frequency expectations and early breastfeeding patterns.
- NHS.“Breastfeeding: is my baby getting enough milk?”Lists practical signs that a breastfed newborn is taking enough milk.
