Nursing & Maternity Bra Size Guide

Your bra size changes 3 times during pregnancy + postpartum. Here's how to size each phase — with a calculator that adjusts for the growth.

3 phases Calculator Brand picks Free

Your pregnancy bra size calculator

Estimated current bra size
⚠️ Important: these are estimates from typical averages. Get a professional fitting at 14 weeks, 30 weeks, and 2 weeks postpartum for the most accurate sizing. Free fittings at most maternity stores.

How your bra size changes — phase by phase

Every body is different, but these are the typical patterns. Use them as a guide, not a rule.

Phase 1 — First trimester (weeks 1–13)

Cup goes up first, before the bump shows

+1 cup size (occasionally +2). Band usually unchanged.

Breasts become tender and grow rapidly in the first 8 weeks — for many people, this is the FIRST sign of pregnancy. The growth slows in the second month.

Buy now: 2 stretchy, wireless "transition" bras 1 cup up. Sleep bras for nighttime tenderness. Don't invest in expensive bras yet — sizing will keep changing.
Phase 2 — Second trimester (weeks 14–27)

Band increases as ribcage expands

+1 band size, +1 more cup size. Total so far: +1 band, +2 cups from baseline.

Your ribcage actually widens to make room for the growing uterus + baby. By week 20, most people need a new band. Underwire becomes uncomfortable.

Buy now: 3 wireless maternity bras in your current size, 1 maternity sports bra, 1 sleep bra. Splurge here — you'll wear these for months.
Phase 3 — Third trimester (weeks 28–40+)

Final adjustment + colostrum production

Cup may go up 1 more (or stay). Band stable.

Around week 30, you may start leaking colostrum. Time to switch to nursing-style bras with clip-down cups. Get fitted again — most fitting services include a free post-fitting.

Buy now: 2–3 nursing bras (NOT maternity-only), nursing pads (washable or disposable), 1 hospital-friendly sleep nursing bra. Avoid underwire.
Phase 4 — Nursing / lactating

Breasts fluctuate daily based on feeding

Band may shrink back ½–1 size. Cup stays large, fluctuates +/- 1 cup during feeds.

Postpartum bra sizing is the most variable phase — your breasts fill up before feeds and empty during. Most nursing bras are designed with stretch to handle this. Avoid anything stiff or underwired.

Buy now: 4–5 nursing bras (you'll go through 1–2 per day with leakage), nursing tank tops, a pumping bra (hands-free).
Phase 5 — Weaning & post-weaning

Settling to your "new normal"

Band similar to pre-pregnancy. Cup typically 1 size up (or back to baseline).

It takes 3–6 months after weaning for your breasts to reach their "final" post-baby size. For many people, breasts end up 1 cup smaller or 1 cup larger than pre-pregnancy — rarely the exact same.

Buy now: get re-fitted! Don't assume you're back to pre-pregnancy size. Splurge on 3–5 well-fitting bras to last you the next several years.

Best nursing bra brands (by type)

Hospital / labor stay

Kindred Bravely, Davin & Adley — soft, no-clip "sleep" nursing bras you can wear during labor + immediately after.

Daily wear

Bravado, Cake Lingerie, Motherhood, ThirdLove Maternity, Hatch — best fit, durable, wash well.

Sports / pumping

Sweat & Milk, Larken X, Bao Bei — designed for active nursing parents. Pumping cutouts integrated.

Budget

Amazon Essentials, Felina, Playtex — under $25, get 3–5 to rotate through laundry cycles.

Plus-size nursing

Kindred Bravely (up to G), Bravado (up to H), Cake Lingerie — true plus and full-bust sizing.

Frequently asked questions

When should I get my first nursing bra?

Most people buy their first proper nursing bras around week 28–32. Before that, stretchy maternity bras (which open from the top, not the clip) work fine.

How many cup sizes will I go up?

Most people go up 2–3 cup sizes total from pre-pregnancy to peak nursing. Some go up only 1 (if you started larger), some go up 4+ (if you started small).

Should I wear underwire while nursing?

Most lactation consultants say no, especially in the first 8 weeks. Underwire can press on milk ducts and contribute to clogged ducts or mastitis. Wireless or soft-wire only.

How many nursing bras should I have?

Minimum 4–5. You'll often wear two per day (one becomes wet/stained mid-day, especially early postpartum). Add 2 sleep bras and 1 pumping bra.

When will I be able to wear regular bras again?

About 3–6 months after fully weaning. Some people switch to "wireless transition" bras earlier (3 months postpartum) and never go back to underwire. Get fitted again — your size has likely changed.

Does breastfeeding ruin breast shape?

No. Research (including a major 2008 plastic surgery study) shows pregnancy itself — not breastfeeding — is the main factor in post-baby breast changes. Genetics, weight changes, and age also contribute. Wearing a supportive bra during pregnancy + nursing helps preserve elasticity.

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