Most 5-month-olds take about 24–32 oz (700–950 mL) of milk per day, split across 5–8 feeds based on hunger cues.
At five months, feeding can feel smoother and messier at the same time. Some babies stretch naps, sip fast, then pop off to watch the room. Others want extra milk for a few days, then slide back into their usual rhythm.
This article gives you usable numbers, plus checks that matter more than a perfect ounce count. You’ll get daily ranges, per-feed ballparks, bottle sizing tips, and a way to spot when it’s time to call your pediatrician.
What Changes At 5 Months
Many babies get more alert at this age. That can mean shorter nursing sessions, more frequent “snack” feeds, or sudden bottle refusal that seems to come out of nowhere.
Sleep can shift too. Some babies drop a night feed and shift more milk to the day. Others wake more often and take small, drowsy feeds overnight. Either pattern can be normal if diapers and growth stay steady.
How Much Breast Milk At 5 Months? Daily Intake Ranges
For lots of healthy five-month-olds, total milk in a full day sits around 24–32 ounces (700–950 mL). Some babies sit below that and thrive. Some go above it during growth spurts. The aim is steady growth and good output, not chasing one magic number.
If you want a wider, research-backed bracket, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development notes that infants at 4–6 months often take 28–45 oz of breast milk or formula per day. NICHD breastfeeding factsheet includes that range.
Typical Total In 24 Hours
- Common daily total: 24–32 oz (700–950 mL)
- Broader range seen in guidance: 28–45 oz (830–1330 mL)
The wider range catches a lot of real-life variation, including days when bottles look “high” simply because they’re measured and paced differently than nursing.
Per Feed Estimates
Turn the daily total into a per-feed guess:
- 5 feeds/day: about 5–6 oz each
- 6 feeds/day: about 4–5 oz each
- 7–8 feeds/day: about 3–4 oz each
Breastfed babies often vary more from feed to feed. A longer morning feed and a few short “top-off” feeds can still land inside the same daily band.
By Weight Shortcut For Planning Bottles
When you’re packing bottles for daycare, some caregivers use a simple starting point: around 2.5 ounces per pound of body weight per day, with many babies leveling off near 32 ounces in 24 hours. Treat it as planning math, not a rule. Your baby’s cues and diaper output still get the final say.
If Your Baby Mostly Nurses
Nursing doesn’t come with ounce marks, so you lean on baby-led signals. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes that frequency and amount vary by baby across the early months. CDC guidance on how much and how often to breastfeed runs through what many families see.
If your baby has steady wet diapers, seems settled after most feeds, and keeps gaining along their curve, intake is almost surely fine, even if sessions feel short.
Feeding Frequency That Feels Normal
At five months, many babies land around 5–8 milk feeds in 24 hours. Some do fewer, larger feeds. Some snack through the day and take one longer feed before bed.
A simple rhythm many families notice looks like this:
- Morning: one fuller feed soon after wake-up
- Daytime: feeds every 2.5–4 hours, often near naps
- Evening: 1–2 extra feeds before the longest sleep stretch
- Night: 0–2 feeds, depending on sleep
Why Five Months Can Look Like “Snacking”
Distraction is real. Babies can pop off the breast to watch a sibling, then ask to latch again ten minutes later. If your day is full of short feeds, try a dimmer room, fewer noises, or a quiet corner for one or two feeds. Small changes can stretch sessions without forcing anything.
How To Tell If Intake Is Enough Without Measuring
You don’t need to weigh every feed to feel steady. These checks work in real life:
- Wet diapers: steady output with pale urine.
- Stools: patterns vary a lot at this age.
- Growth: steady gain along your baby’s curve over time.
- After-feed cues: relaxed hands, calmer body, dozing off, or content looking around.
One off day doesn’t mean much. Look for a pattern over several days.
Table: Breast Milk Amounts At 5 Months By Common Scenarios
| Scenario | What You Might See | Practical Move |
|---|---|---|
| Only nursing | Sessions vary; baby “snacks” some afternoons | Track diapers and the growth curve, not minutes |
| Pumped milk by bottle | Most feeds land around 3–6 oz | Start with 4 oz bottles; add 1 oz only if cues stay hungry |
| Combo feeding | Daytime bottles, evening nursing | Match bottle size to what a nursing feed seems to replace |
| Growth-spurt stretch (2–5 days) | Extra feeds, fussier evenings | Offer milk more often; re-check output once the spurt passes |
| Distracted feeder | Short feeds, frequent re-latching | Use a calmer spot for one or two feeds; nurse after naps |
| Sleepy feeder | Dozing mid-feed, slower gain | Switch sides, tickle feet, change diaper mid-feed |
| Fast let-down | Coughing, pulling off, gulping early | Try laid-back nursing; hand express a little, then latch |
| Daycare transition | Bottles go up or down during the first week | Send smaller bottles; adjust after two steady days |
| Longer night sleep | Fewer night feeds, bigger morning feed | Add a daytime feed or pump session while your body adapts |
Right-Sizing Bottles So Milk Doesn’t Get Wasted
Many five-month-olds do well with 4–5 oz bottles. Some take 6 oz. A few prefer 3 oz more often. Start smaller, then scale up. That saves milk and makes daycare feeding smoother.
A Simple Two-Bottle Method
- Offer 3–4 oz first.
- If hunger cues stay strong, top off with 1–2 oz.
It’s low-drama and gives clear feedback fast.
Paced Bottle Feeding Keeps Intake Closer To Nursing
Paced bottle feeding slows the flow so your baby can pause and choose. Watch for “I’m done” cues like turning the head, relaxed hands, and losing interest in sucking. If caregivers push to finish a bottle, talk through these cues so feeds stay baby-led.
When Intake Looks Low
Short nursing sessions can still move a lot of milk, since older babies often transfer milk faster than newborns. Still, low intake can happen.
Call your pediatrician if wet diapers drop, your baby seems unusually sleepy or hard to rouse for feeds, or weight gain stalls. Those signs deserve a real check, not trial-and-error.
Common Reasons A Five-Month-Old Drinks Less For A Few Days
- Cold, fever, or stuffy nose
- Teething discomfort
- Distraction during daytime feeds
- Big routine change (travel, daycare start, new caregiver)
If distraction is driving it, try one calm feed right after wake-up and one calm feed right after a nap. Many babies focus better when sleepy.
When Intake Looks High
Some babies sit near the upper end of ranges and keep steady growth. Others spike during growth spurts. If your baby often takes more than 32 oz by bottle and still acts hungry, check nipple flow and pacing first. Fast flow can lead to over-drinking.
Also check the sleep picture. Frequent night waking can add small feeds that raise the daily total. That can settle as sleep shifts.
Table: Simple Checks When Feeding Feels Off
| Signal | What It Can Point To | What To Try Next |
|---|---|---|
| Wet diapers drop | Lower milk intake or illness | Offer milk more often; call your pediatrician if output stays low |
| Baby cries at the bottle | Flow too fast, gas, or reflux discomfort | Slow the nipple, pace the feed, pause to burp |
| Short nursing sessions all day | Distraction or strong let-down | Nurse in a calmer spot; try laid-back positioning |
| Fussy evenings with frequent feeds | Cluster feeding or growth spurt | Offer extra feeds for a few days; watch diapers and mood |
| Daycare bottles come home unfinished | Bottles too large or nap timing | Send smaller bottles; add a nurse/pump session after pickup |
| Spit-up increases | Large volumes, fast flow, or air intake | Smaller feeds, paced bottle, upright time after feeds |
| Stools turn hard after early solids | Not enough fluid, new foods | Offer milk first; keep solids small and soft at first |
Solids And Breast Milk At Five Months
Many babies aren’t ready for solids until closer to six months. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends breast milk only feeding for about six months, then continuing while adding foods. AAP infant food and feeding guidance sets that timing.
The World Health Organization also sets complementary foods at around six months, with breast milk continuing alongside foods. WHO complementary feeding topic page summarizes what that looks like as foods begin.
If your pediatrician suggests solids at five months for a specific reason, keep milk as the anchor. At this stage, solids are often tiny tastes, not meal-sized portions.
A Milk-First Order That Works For Many Babies
- Offer milk first.
- Offer a small amount of solids after.
- Stop when your baby shows “done” cues.
This order protects milk intake while your baby learns new textures.
Pumping And Daycare Planning
If you pump, output can vary by time of day. Many parents see more in the morning and less late afternoon. That’s normal.
For an eight-hour daycare day, many babies take three bottles of 3–5 oz, then nurse at pickup. If your baby drains every bottle and still looks hungry, add 1 oz to one bottle and watch for two days. If bottles come home half full, shrink them.
A One-Day Milk Log That Brings Clarity
Log one normal day, then stop. Track:
- Start time of each feed
- Bottle ounces offered and finished (if bottle feeding)
- Wet diapers and stools
- Notes: sleepy, distracted, sick, teething
That snapshot often shows the real issue: long gaps between bottles, fast-flow nipples, or a baby who nurses better right after sleep.
When To Get Medical Help Fast
Seek medical care right away if your baby shows signs of dehydration (few wet diapers, dry mouth, no tears when crying) or seems unusually sleepy or hard to wake. Also get care if there’s vomiting that won’t stop, a fever in a young infant, or any concern that your baby can’t keep milk down.
If something feels off, trust your gut and call your pediatrician. Feeding questions are common, and you deserve clear answers that fit your baby.
References & Sources
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).“Breastfeeding and Breast Milk.”Provides a daily milk intake range for infants aged 4–6 months.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“How Much and How Often to Breastfeed.”Explains how feeding frequency and amount vary by baby over the early months.
- American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).“Infant Food and Feeding.”States timing for only milk feeding and the transition to foods.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Complementary Feeding.”Summarizes starting complementary foods at around 6 months while continuing breast milk.
