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Feeding & Formula

Bottle, breast, or both: a fed, growing baby with a sane parent is the goal. Here's how the whole system works.

How formula works Which formula? Safe prep Breastfeeding Every baby Solids Never list
At a glance

How formula works

Infant formula is engineered to imitate breast milk. Most US formula starts with cow's milk that's been substantially reworked: the protein is heat-treated for digestibility, lactose is added to match human milk's sugar, and vegetable oils replace butterfat. MedlinePlus AAP

Here's the part that can save you money and worry: every formula legally sold in the US must meet the same FDA nutrient requirements: minimum amounts of 29 nutrients, maximums on 9 of them, set in federal regulation (21 CFR 107.100). A formula missing them can't legally be sold as infant formula. FDA

Translation The $18 store-brand can and the $45 boutique can both meet the identical federal nutrition floor. "Gentle," "sensitive," and "comfort" are marketing descriptions, not regulated categories; the nutrition inside is what's regulated. Buy on protein type (below), tolerance, and price. The AAP's shortage guidance says it flat out: for most babies, switching brands, including to store brands, is fine. AAP

Which formula? The 5 protein types

TypeWho it's for
Cow's-milk-based (most of the market)The default: almost all babies do well on it. Iron-fortified for all non-breastfed babies per the AAP.
SoyRare specific situations (like galactosemia). It won't fix a cow's-milk allergy; up to half of milk-allergic infants react to soy too.
Partially hydrolyzed (the "gentle" ones)Protein pre-broken into smaller pieces, "in theory" easier to digest (MedlinePlus's own words). Fine to try for gas and fussiness; not a medical necessity.
Extensively hydrolyzed (hypoallergenic)True cow's-milk-protein allergy: rashes, blood in stool, wheezing. Pricier; use with your pediatrician.
Amino acid-basedThe rare baby who reacts even to hydrolyzed formula. Fully medical territory, and the one category you should not casually switch away from.

MedlinePlus AAP AAP

Goat-milk formulas are now FDA-notified products sold in the US, but they are not the answer for cow's-milk allergy (high cross-reactivity). AAP European formulas bought through informal importers: the rules changed. Since October 2025, imported formula must fully meet US requirements to be sold here. The AAP's warning on informal imports stands: no US recall pipeline, mixing instructions in other languages and units (a dangerous combination), and "no scientific evidence or research showing that imported formulas are better for babies." FDA AAP

"Toddler milks" (stage 3, "transition" formulas): the AAP calls them unnecessary, nutritionally incomplete, unregulated as a category, often sugary, and more expensive than the whole milk that's recommended from 12 months. Skip. AAP

Safe prep: the rules that are about safety

Formula comes as powder (cheapest), concentrate (mix 1:1 with water), and ready-to-feed (priciest, zero mixing errors). One safety fact should drive your choice early on: unlike liquid formula, powder is not sterile. AAP CDC

For babies under 2 months, premature, or immunocompromised Powder can carry Cronobacter: rare, but life-threatening for the youngest babies. For these babies the CDC advises ready-to-feed liquid when possible, or hot-water prep: boil water, cool about 5 minutes, mix while still very hot (~158°F/70°C) to kill germs, then cool to feeding temperature. After 2 months in a healthy full-term baby, ordinary safe-water mixing is fine. CDC AAP
Prepared formula…Time limit (CDC)
At room temperatureUse within 2 hours of preparing
Once a feeding startsUse within 1 hour, then discard (backwash is real)
In the refrigeratorUse within 24 hours
Open can of powderUse within 1 month

CDC

Breastfeeding: the honest basics

The AAP recommends exclusive breastfeeding for about 6 months, then continuing alongside solids as long as you and your baby want, and in the same breath says families who use formula, combo-feed, or stop early deserve "nonjudgmental support," because feeding plans meet reality. Both things are official guidance. AAP

Idea credit: KellyMom (Kelly Bonyata, IBCLC, kellymom.com). Most "low supply" panic is a misreading of normal newborn behavior: frequent nursing, evening fussiness, and shorter sleep say nothing about supply; diapers and weight are the evidence. Her free, evidence-based breastfeeding library has reassured a generation of worried parents at 3 a.m. If breastfeeding is painful or truly not working, a lactation consultant (IBCLC) is the actual fix: most problems are mechanical and solvable.

Every baby, every method

Solids: around 6 months

Start when the signs line up, around 6 months (never before 4): sits with support, steady head, opens for the spoon, swallows instead of tongue-thrusting food back out. CDC

Allergens: earlier is better. The old "delay peanut and egg" advice is dead: delaying doesn't prevent allergies, and for high-risk babies (severe eczema or egg allergy), peanut-containing food may start as early as 4–6 months with your pediatrician in the loop. Thin peanut butter into puree; never whole peanuts. AAP

Iron matters from ~4–6 months: iron-rich solids (or a supplement for exclusively breastfed babies from 4 months; ask at the 4-month visit). AAP

The never-under-12-months list