โš ๏ธ Medical Disclaimer: These tools are for educational purposes only and are not medical advice. Please consult your pediatrician or healthcare provider for any health concerns.
Free Tool

Baby Feeding Tracker

Log every feed and keep a complete daily record of your baby's feeds. Breast milk, formula, expressed milk, or solids. Data saves on your device.

100% Free No Login Works on Mobile Data Stays Private

Feeding tracker is essential for new American moms juggling pediatrician visits, lactation consultant feedback, possible insurance coverage of pumps, and often working through Family Medical Leave Act considerations. This tracker covers breastfeeding sessions, formula intake. Also starts solids tracking around 6 months per AAP guidance. We help you have informed conversations with your pediatrician and lactation consultant.

๐Ÿผ Baby Feeding Tracker

Log every feed, track intervals, and monitor your baby's daily intake

0
Feeds today
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Since last feed
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Avg duration

Feed History

No feeds logged yet.
Log your first feed above.

How to use this tool

This tracker helps you monitor your baby's feeding patterns, which is critical especially in the first weeks of life. It takes 10 seconds to log each feed.

  1. 1
    Select feed type

    Choose from Breast Left, Breast Right, Both Breasts, Formula/Bottle, Expressed Milk, or Solid Food. Tracking which breast you used last helps ensure even supply.

  2. 2
    Enter duration in minutes

    How long did the feed last? For breastfeeding, count from when baby latched. For bottle, count until finished. Even a rough estimate (5-15 min) is helpful for pattern tracking.

  3. 3
    Add amount (for bottle feeds)

    If using formula or expressed milk, enter how many ml your baby drank. This is especially important if your paediatrician is monitoring intake.

  4. 4
    Log and watch the stats

    Tap "Log This Feed." The stats at the top update instantly. Feeds today, time since last feed, and average duration. Your history shows the last 30 feeds.

๐Ÿ’ก Watch the interval, not just the count

Newborns need 8-12 feeds in 24 hours. But more important than the count is the interval. If your baby goes more than 4 hours without feeding in the first month, wake them to feed. This tracker shows you "Since last feed" at a glance.

โš ๏ธ Contact your doctor if

Your newborn is feeding fewer than 6 times in 24 hours. Your baby is not producing 6+ wet nappies per day by day 5. Baby seems excessively sleepy, difficult to wake for feeds, or is losing more than 10% of birth weight by day 5.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. All your feeding data is saved only in your browser's local storage on your device. Nothing is sent to any server. We cannot see your data. Only you can access it from the same browser on the same device.
Newborns (0-4 weeks): 8-12 feeds per 24 hours. 1-3 months: 7-9 feeds. 3-6 months: 6-8 feeds. 6-12 months: 4-6 feeds (with solids introduced). Every baby is different. These are averages. Follow your baby's hunger cues above all.
A typical breastfeed lasts 10-20 minutes per breast. Some efficient feeders finish in 5-10 minutes. If your baby consistently feeds for under 5 minutes or over 45 minutes, discuss this with a lactation consultant.
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends starting solids at exactly 6 months. Not before. Starting earlier increases risk of allergies and choking. Start with single-grain cereals, then soft cooked vegetables, fruits, lentils water.

How baby feeding tracking care actually works in the United States

Pediatric care in America has too many decision points. Most parents do not realize this until midnight on a Tuesday. Your pediatrician handles routine stuff. After hours though, you have options to sort through. Nurse triage line that comes with your pediatric practice, free. Telehealth like Teladoc or Amwell, usually a small copay through insurance. Urgent care clinics, the CVS MinuteClinic and Walgreens Healthcare type places, around $100 to $150 cash. ER for actual emergencies, anywhere from $500 to $3000 even with insurance. Choice depends on baby age, severity of what is going on, and your insurance situation. Under 3 months with any fever (100.4 Fahrenheit, 38 Celsius), skip the decision tree completely. Go straight to ER. AAP is firm on that one.

📞 Emergency contacts in the United States

For emergencies in the US: call 911. For non-emergency advice, call your pediatrician or the Poison Control Center at 1-800-222-1222 if you suspect a medication issue. Telehealth services like Teladoc, Amwell, MDLive offer 24/7 pediatric consultations covered by most insurance plans.

What American moms actually deal with

American parents get conflicting advice from every direction. Wellness industry says lavender oil for everything. Some of those oils are actually unsafe for babies under 2 years old. Online mom forums swing from "every fever is fine, just wait it out" to "rush to the ER right now." Pediatricians want measured responses based on evidence. Insurance companies want you to call the nurse line first. None of these voices is entirely wrong. Just incomplete. AAP guidance is consistent and worth trusting more than Instagram momfluencers. For babies over 3 months, watchful waiting with Tylenol or Motrin and good hydration is fine for 24 to 48 hours unless something concerning develops. Under 3 months, any fever is an ER visit. No exceptions, no waiting it out.

American-specific questions

Under the Affordable Care Act, most health insurance plans must cover a breast pump for nursing mothers, typically through a Durable Medical Equipment supplier. Coverage varies: some cover only manual, others cover hospital-grade rentals. Call your insurance to verify your specific coverage. Major pump brands include Medela, Spectra. Also Willow.
AAP supports breastfeeding as optimal but recognizes that combination feeding (breast plus formula) is preferable to no breastfeeding. AAP recommends introducing one bottle of expressed milk between 3-6 weeks (after breastfeeding is established) if combination feeding is planned. Use the slow-flow nipple to prevent flow preference. Track to ensure adequate intake.
AAP recommends introducing solids around 6 months, when baby shows readiness signs: sits with support, has lost tongue-thrust reflex, shows interest in food, can move food to back of mouth. Continue breastmilk or formula as primary nutrition until 12 months. Iron-fortified cereals, pureed meats, and pureed vegetables are good first foods. The AAP no longer requires delaying allergens like peanut, egg, and dairy.