Low Milk Supply: How to Recognize a Lactation Crisis and What to Do
| Category | Feeding |
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⏱️ Reading time: 2 minutes

Medically reviewed by pediatrician and perinatal psychologist Polina Kizino
If you feel like your milk supply has dropped, it might be a lactation crisis. This temporary dip in milk production can happen even with well-established breastfeeding — often around week 3, week 6, or 3 months. It’s a natural process linked to your baby’s growth and your body adjusting. Offer the breast more often, nurse at night, get plenty of rest — milk supply usually returns in a few days. Formula is needed only if recommended by a doctor.
What’s Inside
Quick takeaways
A lactation crisis is a temporary decrease in milk production — not a reason to stop breastfeeding.
It usually occurs at 3 weeks, 6 weeks, and around 3 months, but can happen later too.
Nurse more frequently, rest, and drink according to thirst — this helps restore milk supply.
Formula should only be introduced if recommended by a doctor.
A lactation crisis usually resolves in 2–4 days.
What is a lactation crisis
It’s a temporary drop in milk supply that can happen even to experienced breastfeeding moms. It often aligns with growth crises, increased feeding needs, or maternal stress.
Common times:
- 3 weeks
- 6 weeks
- 3 months
- returning to work
- fatigue, lack of sleep, or stress
How to tell if it’s a crisis
- Your baby is feeding more often and seems restless at the breast.
- Your breasts feel soft or “empty” (but this alone isn’t proof of low milk).
- You pump less than before.
- You don’t feel strong letdowns like you used to.
Important: if your baby has 6+ wet diapers a day and is gaining weight, there’s no reason to worry
What to do during a crisis
- Nurse more often — breastfeeding works on demand and supply.
- Don’t limit nursing time — especially in the evening; cluster feeding is normal.
- Drink to thirst, rest, and eat enough.
- Night feeds are important — prolactin (milk hormone) is more active at night.
- Skin-to-skin contact helps oxytocin flow and supports milk ejection.
- Warm compresses before nursing and gentle breast massage can help milk flow.
When to consult a doctor
Reach out to your pediatrician or lactation consultant if:
- Fewer than 6 wet diapers per day
- Weight loss or slowed weight gain
- Constant crying after feeds
- Lethargy or weakness
- Baby feeds less often or doesn’t show hunger cues
You may need temporary formula supplementation — but only if there’s a true nutritional concern.
Remember: it’s temporary
A lactation crisis isn’t the end of breastfeeding — it’s a sign your baby needs more milk, and your body can meet that demand. Calm, rest, and closeness with your baby are your best allies.
With care
Our articles are based on evidence-based medicine and reviewed by pediatricians. However, they do not replace a consultation with your doctor. Every child is unique — if you have any concerns, please consult a medical professional.
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Sources
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