How Do I Know If My Baby Is Eating Enough?
The most frequent question of the first days — with evidence-based answers, not assumptions.
You can't see how much milk a baby takes from the breast. That makes "is my baby eating enough?" the number one source of anxiety in the first weeks. The good news: the baby's body gives very clear signals that they are eating well — if you know where to look.
The 3 indicators that really matter
Wet diapers
6+ per day
Weight
+150-200g/week
General state
Alert and content
Clear signs that YES, they are eating well
Diapers (days 1-2)
1-2 wet diapers per day. Urine is dark (normal with colostrum). Meconium (black stools) starts coming out.
Diapers (day 3-4)
3-4 wet diapers. Stools change to green/yellow — sign that milk is coming in.
Diapers (day 5+)
6+ wet diapers per day with clear/pale yellow urine. This is the most reliable indicator.
Weight (day 3-5)
It's normal to lose up to 10% of birth weight. If they lose more, ask your pediatrician for help.
Weight (week 2)
Should have regained birth weight. From here: +150-200g per week is ideal.
Signs that they DO need more milk: constant crying without calming at the breast, fewer than 6 wet diapers per day after day 5, very dark or intense yellow urine, or not regaining birth weight by 14 days.
The "empty breasts" trap: many mothers feel their breasts are empty and think they have no milk. Breasts are rarely "empty" — they are always producing. The feeling of fullness disappears when production regulates (2-6 weeks), not when the milk runs out.
📲 Share this tip
6 wet diapers per day = well-hydrated baby = baby eating enough. It's the most reliable indicator.
mi·ma · bitácora de tu bebé
In mi·ma
In mi·ma you log each diaper in 2 seconds. In one day you already know if your baby has the 6 wet diapers that confirm they're eating well.
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mi·ma is a support logbook for parents. This guide is informational and does not replace consultation with your pediatrician. For any concerns about your baby's health, consult a healthcare professional.
Sources
- · AAP — Signs Your Baby Is Getting Enough Milk
- · La Leche League — Is My Baby Getting Enough?
- · WHO — Indicators of adequate breastfeeding