Colostrum is usually easiest to collect by hand first, then by pump after birth if your baby is sleepy, apart from you, or not latching.
Colostrum is thick, sticky, and made in tiny amounts. That changes the way you collect it. If you start with a full electric pump too soon, those early drops can cling to the parts and never make it to your baby. In many situations, your hands do a better job at the start.
People usually mean one of two moments when they say they want to pump colostrum: late pregnancy, or the first days after birth. The timing and tools shift between those moments, so sort that out first.
How To Start Pumping Colostrum Before And After Birth
If you are still pregnant, start with hand expression, not a pump. Many maternity units say it is usually safe from 36 to 37 weeks when your midwife or OB says your pregnancy is okay for it. Cambridge University Hospitals lays that out in its antenatal hand expression guidance, which also notes that some people are asked to do this when their baby may need extra milk soon after birth.
If you have a history of preterm labour, current bleeding, a cervical stitch, placenta problems, or painful contractions, do not start on your own. Get a direct yes from your maternity team first.
Before You Begin
You do not need much gear: clean hands, a sterile syringe or small sterile container, a label, and a calm place to sit.
- Wash your hands and dry them well.
- Warm your breast with a shower, warm cloth, or gentle massage.
- Lean back or sit upright with your shoulders loose.
- Have your syringe or container open and ready before the first drop appears.
When Collection Makes Extra Sense
You might be asked to collect colostrum before birth when your baby could need milk early, such as with diabetes in pregnancy, twins, a planned caesarean birth, time on the neonatal unit, or a known feeding issue. Many low-risk parents also learn hand expression late in pregnancy so the first day feels less awkward.
| Situation | Best Starting Point | What Usually Makes Sense |
|---|---|---|
| 36 to 37 weeks, pregnancy going smoothly | Hand expression | Try a few minutes once a day, then build up only if it feels fine. |
| History of preterm labour or current contractions | Pause and ask your OB or midwife | Do not start without direct clearance. |
| Gestational or pre-existing diabetes | Hand expression late in pregnancy | Stored colostrum can be handy if baby needs milk early. |
| Twins or triplets | Hand expression | Practice the technique before birth so the first feeds feel easier. |
| Planned caesarean birth | Hand expression | A few stored syringes can be useful if the first feed is delayed. |
| Baby not latching in the first hours after birth | Hand expression | Collect drops often and feed by syringe, spoon, or cup if staff advises it. |
| Baby in NICU or apart from you | Hand expression, then pump | Start early, then add a pump once colostrum volume rises. |
| You see almost nothing at first | Keep going gently | One drop still counts; volume often grows over the next day or two. |
Hand Expression Usually Wins The First Round
Use your thumb and first finger in a wide C-shape, about an inch back from the nipple. Press back toward the chest, then compress and release. Do not slide over the skin. The rhythm is press, compress, release, rest, then repeat.
Move around the breast after a minute or two. Tiny droplets may show up at one spot, stop, then show again after you shift your fingers. Catch them with a sterile syringe or let them bead on the nipple and pull them in with the syringe tip.
If You Get Nothing At First
That does not mean your body is failing. Early colostrum can be measured in drops, not ounces. Some parents see fluid on day one, others need a few tries, and many still go on to make plenty of milk after birth.
When A Pump Fits In
After birth, a pump can be useful when your baby is not feeding well at the breast, when you are apart, or when you start seeing more than a few drops. East Kent Hospitals says hand expression is preferred in the first 72 hours after birth because those early amounts can be lost in pump parts; many parents start the pump after that point or once they can hand express more than 5 mL at a time in its breast milk expressing advice for hospital care.
If you do use a pump, start on a low suction setting. Pain is a sign to stop and reset the flange size, suction, or position. A short stimulation cycle, then hand expression right after, is a common first-days setup.
A Simple Pump Routine
When baby is not latching or you are apart, aim for frequent milk removal, not marathon sessions. Many maternity teams suggest around eight sessions in 24 hours. That can look like ten to fifteen minutes with the pump, then one or two minutes of hand expression on each side.
- Start with breast massage for a minute.
- Pump on low to moderate suction.
- Stop if it pinches or rubs.
- Finish by hand expressing into a syringe or small cup.
- Label every container right away.
Storage And Labeling Without Losing A Drop
Fresh colostrum is easy to waste through sloppy storage. The safest habit is to collect small amounts, label each one with the date and time, and chill or freeze it fast. The current CDC milk storage chart says freshly expressed milk can stay at room temperature for up to 4 hours, in the fridge for up to 4 days, and in the freezer for about 6 months for best quality, with up to 12 months still acceptable.
Before birth, many parents collect into sterile oral syringes because the amounts are so small. After birth, once the volume rises, storage bags or food-grade containers with tight lids are easier. Freeze small portions so one tiny feed does not thaw a big stash.
| Where You Store It | Usual Time Limit | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Room temperature, 77°F or colder | Up to 4 hours | Fine for a fresh feed soon after expression. |
| Refrigerator | Up to 4 days | Place it deep in the fridge, not in the door. |
| Freezer | About 6 months best; 12 months acceptable | Leave headspace in the container since milk expands. |
| Cooler with frozen ice packs | Up to 24 hours | Useful for travel to and from the hospital. |
Mistakes That Waste Early Milk
Most colostrum problems come from technique, not from your body. These are the ones that trip people up:
- Starting with hard suction and ending up sore.
- Using the pump before trying hand expression in the early window.
- Waiting too long between sessions when baby is not latching.
- Pouring tiny amounts into a big bottle, where the milk sticks to the sides.
- Forgetting the label, then not knowing which milk to use first.
- Assuming “only drops” means the session did not count.
A Calm Start Beats A Perfect One
You do not need a freezer full of syringes for colostrum collection to be worth doing. A few labeled drops can be enough for an early top-up. Start with your hands, add a pump when the timing fits, and judge progress by steady milk removal, not by big numbers in the bottle.
If you are still pregnant, get the green light from your midwife or OB before starting. If your baby is already here and feeds are rough, ask the maternity team to watch one hand-expression or pumping session with you.
References & Sources
- Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.“Antenatal hand expression.”Sets out late-pregnancy timing, common reasons to collect colostrum, and the basic hand-expression method.
- East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust.“Expressing and handling breast milk in hospital.”States that hand expression is preferred in the first 72 hours after birth and notes when a pump often fits in.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“Breast Milk Storage and Preparation.”Provides current storage, labeling, and thawing guidance for expressed human milk.
