How Much Breastmilk For An 8-Month-Old? | Real Daily Ranges

Most 8-month-olds still get most calories from milk, while solids add practice, iron, and variety.

At 8 months, your baby can eat real food and still want plenty of milk. That mix can feel confusing, since nursing isn’t measured in ounces and solids change from day to day. The goal is simple: keep milk intake steady enough for growth, then let solids grow at your baby’s pace.

Below you’ll find a realistic daily range, quick ways to check “enough” without obsessing, and easy routines for breast and bottle feeding.

Breastmilk For An 8-Month-Old With Solids: Daily Range

Many babies around this age take 19–30 ounces (570–900 mL) of breastmilk in 24 hours. Some stay near the upper end even with two meals. Some drift lower once meals get bigger and more regular. The range matters more than a single target, since babies differ in size, activity, and how much energy they get from solids.

Health agencies line up on the overall pattern: start complementary foods at 6 months and keep breastfeeding well past that point. The World Health Organization says babies should begin complementary foods at 6 months while continuing breastfeeding up to 2 years or beyond. WHO breastfeeding guidance states that timeline.

What that range looks like in feeds

If your baby takes bottles, a common pattern is 4–6 milk feeds across the day, with 4–6 ounces (120–180 mL) per feed. Nursing babies often do shorter, more frequent sessions, and night feeds can still be part of the routine.

Why totals swing week to week

  • Teething or illness: milk goes up because it’s easy to take.
  • Big nap changes: feeds shift earlier or later, so the day feels different even if the 24-hour total is similar.
  • Solids progress: a baby who eats a full meal may want a smaller milk feed right after.

How To Tell If Your Baby Is Getting Enough Breastmilk

If you nurse directly, you won’t see ounces. You can still get a clear read by watching outcomes that track intake well.

Wet nappies and hydration

Across a normal day, you want regular wet nappies and urine that’s pale to light yellow. A sudden drop in wet nappies, dark urine, or a baby who seems weak calls for medical advice.

Growth trend over time

One weigh-in can mislead. What matters is the trend across weeks. If your baby follows their curve and looks well, intake is usually on track.

Feed finish cues

Relaxed hands, a calm face, and turning away from the breast or bottle often mean “done.” Persistent rooting or fussing right after a feed can mean “more,” or it can mean tiredness, gas, or discomfort. Look for patterns over a few days.

How To Plan Bottles Of Expressed Milk

If you send milk to childcare or share feeds with another caregiver, you need a starting number. Ireland’s Health Service Executive notes that babies fed only breastmilk often take in a typical range of 19–30 ounces (570–900 mL) per day, with an average near 25 ounces (750 mL) in early infancy. HSE guidance on estimating expressed milk shows a simple way to divide a daily total across feeds.

At 8 months, solids add calories, so you may start on the lower side of your baby’s old bottle total and adjust from there. Change slowly: one smaller bottle for three days, then reassess nappies, mood, and hunger cues.

Typical bottle sizes at this age

  • Daytime bottles: 4–6 ounces (120–180 mL) is common.
  • Before naps: some babies take less if they just ate solids.
  • Before bed: many babies take a fuller feed here.

Breastmilk Intake Checks You Can Use At Home

This table links what you see day to day with the most likely meaning and an easy next move. It’s meant to reduce guesswork, not create pressure.

What You Notice What It Can Mean Try This Next
Milk feeds stay steady after solids begin Solids are practice and milk is still the main fuel Keep the same milk rhythm and build solids slowly
Total expressed milk is 19–30 oz (570–900 mL) daily Within a common range for late infancy Hold steady for a week and watch cues
Baby drops a feed after starting two meals Meals may be displacing milk Offer milk before meals for a week
Baby wants to nurse more for two or three days Growth spurt, teething, or a rough week Follow the extra feeds; solids can be lighter
Wet nappies are frequent; urine is pale Hydration is likely fine Keep your plan and offer sips of water with meals
Wet nappies drop; urine is dark Intake may be low or baby may be ill Offer milk more often and get medical advice
Bottle feeds turn into crying, arching, or clamped lips Timing, distraction, or flow may be off Try paced feeding, a calmer room, and smaller volumes
More spit-up after bigger bottles Too much per feed Split volume into smaller feeds
Weight gain stalls across several weeks Milk may be crowded out by solids, or intake is low Shift solids after milk feeds and book a growth check

Feeding Order That Keeps Milk Intake Steady

A simple order works for most families: milk first when hunger is high, solids later when your baby is calm and ready to try textures. This keeps milk from dropping fast while you build solid skills.

A good default day

  • Milk on waking
  • Breakfast-style solids 45–90 minutes later
  • Milk before the next nap
  • Lunch-style solids after waking
  • Milk in the afternoon
  • Dinner-style solids in early evening
  • Milk before bed

What solids should do at 8 months

Solids are for iron, texture practice, and widening your baby’s food range. Many babies do well with two meals per day at 8 months. Three meals can work too if milk stays steady and your baby is keen.

Start meals with iron-rich foods like soft meat, lentils, beans, egg, or fish. Add fruit or veg with vitamin C like berries or cooked peppers to help the body take up iron from plant foods.

Water is for practice

Offer small sips of water with meals in an open cup or straw cup. Keep it small so it doesn’t crowd out milk feeds.

Breastfeeding Guidance That Matches Public Health Advice

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends breastfeeding only for about 6 months, then continued breastfeeding with complementary foods for 2 years or longer as desired. AAP breastfeeding recommendations lays out that stance.

The CDC echoes the same overall direction and frames breastmilk as a strong nutrition source while solids are added. CDC breastfeeding fast facts is a clear, parent-friendly reference.

Sample 24-Hour Patterns For An 8-Month-Old

Use these patterns as templates. Change times to match naps. Keep the sequence of milk first, then solids.

Pattern Milk Feeds Solids
Two-meal day Wake, before each nap, mid-afternoon, bedtime Late morning meal, early evening meal
Milk-heavy week Wake, mid-morning, before naps, late afternoon, bedtime, night if needed One meal, one taste session
Stronger solids interest Wake, before naps, bedtime Two meals plus a small third meal
Childcare bottles Home nursing on waking, two bottles at childcare, nursing after pickup, bedtime nursing One meal at childcare, one meal at home

Common 8-Month Feeding Problems And Fixes

Baby eats solids well and nurses less

If growth and nappies look steady, this can be fine. To protect milk intake, offer milk before meals for a week. If your baby then eats a bit less at meals, that’s okay. Solids will keep building.

Short, distracted nursing

Distraction peaks around this age. Try nursing right after waking, in a dimmer room, or away from noise. For bottles, try paced feeding and a slower flow nipple.

Pump output drops

Pumps can miss what a baby can do. Check flange fit, replace valves, and add one extra short pump session at the same time each day for a week. Track nappies and growth, not pump totals alone.

Constipation after solids

Keep milk feeds steady, add sips of water with meals, and lean on fibre foods like pears, prunes, beans, and oats. If stools are hard pellets, or there’s blood or pain, get medical advice.

When To Get Medical Advice

Get medical advice sooner if you notice:

  • Few wet nappies or dark urine across the day
  • Repeated vomiting, poor alertness, or signs of dehydration
  • Weight gain that stalls across several weeks
  • Milk refusal that lasts more than a day
  • Nursing pain or nipple damage that won’t heal

One-Week Feeding Check That Keeps You Calm

Use this simple check for the next seven days:

  • Stick with 4–6 milk feeds in 24 hours as your default.
  • Keep milk before naps while meals are still small.
  • Serve two meals most days, starting with iron-rich foods.
  • Offer water with meals in small sips.
  • Watch wet nappies and your baby’s mood after feeds.
  • If you adjust, change one feed at a time and reassess after three days.

If your baby is growing steadily, peeing regularly, and staying curious about food, you’re hitting the target. The exact ounce count matters less than those real-life signals.

References & Sources