Most parents do best with 10–15 minute sessions, 8–12 times in 24 hours, starting as soon as expressing is needed.
Colostrum is thick, sticky, and made in small drops. That’s normal. In the first days, the win isn’t a big bottle. The win is steady, frequent stimulation that tells your body, “Keep going.”
If you’re pumping because baby can’t latch yet, you’re separated, or feeds aren’t moving milk well, it’s easy to fixate on minutes. Minutes matter, but rhythm matters more. A shorter session done often usually beats a long session that leaves you sore and dreading the next one.
Why colostrum pumping feels different than pumping later
Colostrum doesn’t behave like mature milk. You might see beads on the nipple, a glossy film inside the flange tunnel, or a few drops you can count. A pump can still be doing its job even when the bottle looks empty.
Early on, hands often collect colostrum better than a pump because you can guide drops straight into a spoon, cup, or syringe with less waste on pump parts. If you want a clear refresher on technique, the CDC hand expression steps lay out the hand placement and press-compress-release rhythm.
A simple approach that works for a lot of parents: use your hands to “gather,” then use the pump to “signal.” You’re not picking one team. You’re using both tools for what they do best.
How Long Do You Pump For Colostrum? Getting the minutes right
Start with 10 minutes per session. If milk is still actively dripping at the end, extend to 15 minutes. Past 15 minutes, many parents don’t gain much colostrum volume, and nipple irritation can snowball fast.
When 5–8 minutes is enough
If baby nursed first and you’re pumping to add extra stimulation, keep it short. A quick 5–8 minutes can be plenty. You’re topping up the signal, not trying to drain.
When 15–20 minutes can make sense
If baby isn’t nursing at all and you’re fully replacing feeds, use 15–20 minutes per session once you can tolerate it comfortably. Longer sessions tend to help more when milk is shifting toward higher volume, not when you’re still in the “drops and teaspoons” phase.
Stop signs that actually matter
- Sharp pain or pinching that doesn’t ease after adjusting positioning.
- Blanching, cracking, or a swollen ring at the base of the nipple.
- Tenderness that worsens each session, even when you turn suction down.
If these show up, shorten sessions and rebuild comfort first. Frequency with comfort beats long sessions with damage. ACOG also notes that in the first days, frequent feeding is a main driver, and colostrum is often enough for many healthy newborns while milk is changing. ACOG breastfeeding challenges guidance
How often to pump colostrum in the first 24–72 hours
If you’re fully expressing, aim for 8–12 sessions in 24 hours. That matches the feeding rhythm many newborns need early on. Think “often and steady,” not “hero sessions.”
A schedule that doesn’t feel like homework
Try “every 2–3 hours by day, one longer stretch at night.” That usually lands you near 8–10 sessions without living by alarms. If you miss one, don’t spiral. Add a session later and keep your next one on track.
If baby is latching sometimes
When baby nurses some feeds, pump after the feeds that felt weak: short nursing, lots of sleep at the breast, or nursing that ends with baby still showing hunger cues. Keep those pumps short unless you’re replacing a full feed.
If you’re separated or baby isn’t nursing yet
Start expressing as soon as you can after birth, then keep the first 48 hours busy with frequent sessions. Early initiation is tied to newborn intake of colostrum and early feeding success in many settings. The WHO describes early initiation and the role of colostrum in that first window. WHO early initiation of breastfeeding
Choosing pump settings for thick early milk
Colostrum responds best to comfort-first settings. Turning suction up to “get more” often backfires by causing swelling that makes flow harder.
Start gentle, then build
Begin in stimulation mode (or a faster cycle) at low suction for a minute or two. Once you see drops or feel a let-down, switch to expression mode and raise suction only to the highest level that still feels comfortable.
Use two-minute “check-ins”
Every couple of minutes, ask: “Am I tense? Are my shoulders creeping up?” If yes, drop suction a notch, breathe out, and reset your posture. A relaxed jaw and loose shoulders can make a real difference.
Double pump when you can
Double pumping can save time and can give a stronger overall signal. If it feels chaotic right now, single pumping is fine. Consistency wins.
Getting more colostrum without longer sessions
When colostrum is slow, adding minutes often doesn’t help much. Small technique changes can.
Warmth and gentle compression
Use a warm washcloth for a minute, then pump. While pumping, add gentle breast compressions. Think steady pressure, release, repeat. You’re helping thick colostrum move toward the nipple.
Hand express first, then pump
Hand express for 2–3 minutes per side, then pump. Many parents see drops show up sooner in the session when the first milk is already near the nipple.
Collect the “hidden” drops
After pumping, look inside the flange tunnel. Colostrum can cling there. You can swipe it with a clean spoon or express a few final drops directly into a syringe. This feels small, but those drops add up across a day.
Check flange fit once, then stop fiddling
Too-large flanges pull in extra tissue and can cause rubbing. Too-small can pinch. A decent fit lets the nipple move freely in the tunnel with minimal extra tissue being tugged in. If you’re between sizes, many parents do better with the smaller option.
Table 1 (after ~40% of article)
Colostrum pumping plans for common situations
| Situation | What to do first | Session pattern to try |
|---|---|---|
| Baby won’t latch yet | Hand express into a syringe, then pump | 10–15 min, 8–12x/24h |
| Baby latches but transfers little | Nurse, then pump | 5–10 min after weak feeds |
| Separation after birth | Start expressing early and often | 15–20 min, about every 2–3 hrs |
| C-section and sleepy baby | Try frequent attempts, add expression | 10–15 min after feeds until alert nursing improves |
| Low colostrum visible in pump | Prioritize hand collection | Hand express 5 min/side, then 5–10 min pump |
| Milk is changing and fullness starts | Relieve pressure, keep comfort first | 10–15 min, stop when softer |
| Exclusive pumping from day one | Set a steady 24-hour cadence | 8–12 sessions, adjust minutes by comfort |
| Collecting colostrum to store | Label, chill fast, freeze if needed | Collect small amounts across the day |
How to tell if you’re doing “enough” during the colostrum phase
Early output can be small. That doesn’t mean it’s failing. Look for repeatable patterns that you can keep doing:
- You’re expressing at least 8 times a day when baby isn’t nursing well.
- Sessions feel tolerable, with no worsening nipple damage.
- Drops show up early in the session, even if the total is small.
Your care team will also track baby’s diapers, weight change, alertness, and jaundice. Those markers guide whether baby needs extra expressed colostrum, donor milk, or formula during the first days.
Tools that make colostrum collection less messy
Syringes and tiny containers
Colostrum sticks to bottle walls. Using 1–5 mL oral syringes or small sterile cups can reduce waste. If you’re pumping, you can hand express the last drops directly into the syringe.
Hands-on pumping that stays gentle
After you turn the pump on, compress and release different areas of the breast. Rotate hand position every minute or so. The aim is to move milk from multiple ducts without grinding the nipple.
A quick cleaning rhythm between sessions
In the early days, you’re tired and time is weird. Make cleaning simple: rinse pump parts right after use, wash with hot soapy water when you can, and let them fully air-dry. Dry parts reduce bacterial growth.
Colostrum storage basics you can actually follow
If you’re collecting colostrum to feed later the same day or to take to the hospital, treat labeling like part of the pumping session. Date and time matter when you’re collecting many small syringes.
Table 2 (after ~60% of article)
Colostrum collection and storage cheat sheet
| Step | What to do | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Label right away | Write date/time and baby’s name on each container | Keeps order clear when you have many small amounts |
| Chill soon | Refrigerate shortly after collection | Slows bacterial growth |
| Keep parts clean | Wash and air-dry pump parts between uses | Reduces contamination risk |
| Cool before combining | Cool fresh milk before mixing with chilled milk | Avoids warming the older milk |
| Freeze smart | Freeze small amounts in appropriate containers | Thaws faster and reduces waste |
| Thaw gently | Thaw in the fridge or warm water, not boiling water | Helps preserve milk quality and safety |
| Use oldest first | Rotate stored milk in date order | Keeps your stash organized |
If you want official storage and thawing details in one place, the CDC’s handling page lists options for fridge, freezer, and thawing methods. CDC breast milk storage and handling
What changes after milk starts shifting from colostrum
Over the first days, milk often shifts toward higher volume. You may notice more flow, a lighter color, and a stronger let-down. When that shift starts, keep the same frequency, then adjust minutes based on comfort and how milk is moving.
A smooth way to adjust session length
If you’re fully pumping and you’re seeing steady flow, 15–20 minutes can fit well. If baby is nursing well, you may only need short “backup” pumps, or none at all.
Don’t chase “empty” breasts
Breasts don’t truly empty. Pumping until nothing comes can leave you sore and can push supply higher than you want. If you notice frequent tightness and painful fullness, shorter sessions with steady spacing often feel better than pushing longer.
When prenatal colostrum expression is on the table
Some parents collect colostrum late in pregnancy because they expect early feeding hurdles, such as diabetes in pregnancy or a planned separation after birth. This isn’t a fit for everyone. Ask your prenatal clinician first, since nipple stimulation can trigger contractions for some people.
If you’re cleared to try it, keep it gentle and brief. Hand expression is usually preferred over pumping at that stage because small volumes can stick to pump parts and be hard to collect.
Small problems that derail pumping, and quick fixes
Pain that ramps up after day one
Early tenderness can happen. Pain that worsens with each session usually points to friction or suction that’s too high. Turn suction down, shorten the session, and lean on frequency. If nipples look puffy after pumping, flange size may be off.
No visible colostrum in the bottle
Check the flange tunnel and the nipple itself. Colostrum can coat surfaces in a thin film. If you’re unsure, hand express into a spoon after pumping to see if drops appear.
Feeling chained to the pump
Batch your basics: eat, pee, refill water, then pump. Use a timer so you’re not staring at the clock. If you’re in the hospital, ask if you can get an extra pump kit so one set can dry while you use the other.
A practical 24-hour sample plan
This template fits many parents who are fully expressing in the first days. Treat it as a starting point, not a rulebook.
- Morning: 3 sessions spaced about 2–3 hours apart, 10–15 minutes each.
- Afternoon: 3 sessions spaced about 2–3 hours apart, add 2–3 minutes of hand expression first if output is slow.
- Evening: 2 sessions, keep suction gentle and posture relaxed.
- Night: 1–2 sessions, with one longer sleep stretch if you can.
If you’re pumping after nursing, cut those sessions to 5–10 minutes and aim them at the feeds that felt weakest. If baby suddenly starts nursing strongly, you can scale pumping down fast.
When to get help fast
Reach out to your maternity team promptly if baby is too sleepy to feed, diapers are sparse, jaundice seems to be rising, or you have fever, red streaking, or worsening breast pain. Colostrum pumping is a tool, not a contest. The right plan is the one that keeps baby fed and keeps you comfortable enough to keep going.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Hand Expression.”Step-by-step method for expressing milk by hand, useful when colostrum volume is small.
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).“Breastfeeding Challenges.”Clinical guidance on early feeding frequency and common breastfeeding issues.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Early Initiation of Breastfeeding to Promote Exclusive Breastfeeding.”Explains early initiation and how it helps newborns receive colostrum soon after birth.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Breast Milk Storage and Preparation.”Safe storage and thawing practices for expressed milk.
