20 Benefits of Bottle Feeding

Baby bottle feeding for infants and parents' feeding choices.

Considering bottle feeding your baby?

Whether you have opted against breastfeeding on your own will or whether you are unable to breastfeed, bottle feeding is a healthy and wonderful alternative to providing your child with the best start to life.

While breastfeeding is always best, there are plenty of the benefits to bottle feeding too! And we here at Stay at Home Mum believe that a FED baby is happy baby – no matter what the loud ‘Breastfeeding Police’ say!

More Reading: – Where to Buy Baby Formula Online (and have it delivered to your door!)

Where to Buy Baby Formula Online

1. Bottle Feeding is less invasive.

Your body is your temple and you may not like the idea of having someone latched onto your breasts.

2. Bottle Feeding is Painless

Bottle feeding’doesn’t’come with the pain that breastfeeding does, including engorgement, cracked nipples, bite marks and mastitis. More Reading: – Where to Buy Goats Milk Formula Online in Australia

3. Bottle Feeding Can be Less Embarrassing

Many women are uncomfortable whipping out their breasts in public, and with bottle feeding, this is never an issue. You can comfortably feed your baby with a bottle anytime.

4. If your baby requires a certain formula, you are not required to change your diet.

No need to switch to soy free or dairy free if you baby is having an allergic reaction to something in your milk.

5. There is no guess work involved.

Breastfeeding mums often wonder if it is something that they have eaten that is causing their baby to be fussy. And thus, it becomes a frustrating trial and error game determining if it’s the onion, the garlic, the coffee or the tomato sauce that is causing their baby to fuss.

6. Bottle Feeding is less demanding.

Breastfed babies often want to feed more often, not only because they are hungry but for comfort as well.

7. You know exactly how much your baby has eaten.

Furthermore, you don’t have to wonder if your baby has gotten enough. Once he has done his bottle, you know he has had enough and should be okay for a few hours. With breastfed babies, you never really know if they have had 30 ml or 200 ml.

8. Bottle Feeding can be easier to regulate a routine.

With this comes an easier way to regulate a routine knowing when your baby is hungry and when she is fussing because she is tired.

9. Your entire family can share in the experience.

You can get your husband, your mother, even your other children to feed the baby and share in this beautiful experience.

10. Bottle feeding accessories can be fun to shop for.

Any excuse to shop is a good one!

11. Feeding is usually less frequent.

You can expect your baby to eat every 3 to 4 hours rather than every 1 to 2 hours in the early stages.

12. You can choose what to feed your baby.

There are plenty of different formula options out there, some which contain extra ingredients, are hypo-allergenic, etc.

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13. Bottle fed babies usually sleep through the night earlier.

This is not guaranteed, but it’s always good to think positive!

14. Bottle Feeding doesn’t interfere with your sex life.

So no leaking boobs when you are in the middle of a moment.

15. It’doesn’t’interfere with your social life.

Furthermore, you can go out to dinner with your friends, have a couple of drinks on a Friday night without worrying about expressing or getting home before feeding time.

16. It can regulate your body quicker.

This is especially beneficial if you plan on having more children soon.

17. You can eat or drink whatever you want.

You don’t have to worry about what you eat or what you drink. – You can even take medications without worrying about passing on chemicals to your baby.

18. It is easier to diagnose your baby’s needs.

Why is your baby fussing? Is she hungry? Is she tired? Is she gassy? You can cross hunger off the list when you bottle feed as you know when she last fed and how much she had.

http://www.verywellfamily.com

19. Bottle Feeding is less frustrating.

Breastfeeding is natural but it certainly’doesn’t’come naturally. It takes a lot of persistence and patience and can be extremely frustrating for the new baby and new mum, especially in the early weeks.

20. Bottle Feeding Allows You to have a break.

You can pass baby over to a relative or your partner and get some sleep, go for lunch or get away for more than a couple of hours without worrying about when baby will need you for a feed again.

Do you know other benefits of bottle feeding?

author avatar
Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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Responses to “20 Benefits of Bottle Feeding”

  1. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    Your reasons are all self-focused, not baby focused. Formula doesn’t come anywhere close to breastfeeding as far as the baby’s health. Your reasons reflect convenience-based parenting. You want to have a baby but keep your old lifestyle.

    Breastfeeding is worth the effort. It is a joy unparalleled.

    1. Nicole Avatar
      Nicole

      Thanks for your opinion. We have an article on benefits of breastfeeding as well if you’d like to have a look through our website.

  2. huntersanomoly Avatar

    The top three comments are the main reasons women do not persevere with breastfeeding. This post is nothing more than an attempt to sabotage that relationship which in some cases can be difficult to establish. Not every mother who breastfeeds experiences pain, bite marks and mastitis, the whole idea that breastfeeding is painful is ridiculous! If you’re suffering pain while feeding, chances are its down to bad latch or bad positioning and is something that can be easily corrected.

    I breastfeed my son and never once have I “whipped a breast out in public” to feed him! My husband and my other two children have as strong a bond with him as I do because there are other way to bond with a child than just feeding. Bath-times, play-times and meal-times are family times that give the rest of the family the time to bond.

    In the first few weeks of life a baby’s stomach is the size of a marble – of course, its also able to stretch and if you’re feeding anything upto 6oz a time, by the time the baby is 4 months, then of course you’d think you wouldn’t have been able to keep up with the “really hungry baby I’d have never been able to feed myself”

    Breastfeeding is a supply and demand system – the hungrier the baby, the more milk the breast produces. Anyone who says they couldn’t keep up with their babies demands is simply uneducated in how the breasts milk production works.

    I get breaks from my breastfed son – its important to me and him – he gets time with other family members and I get a much needed chance for me time.

    Maybe next time you write a post on the top 20 benefits of something, you do research into the opposite side you’re bashing first!

    1. Annoyed Avatar
      Annoyed

      I had to bottle feed both of my sons and it’s ridiculous that people think that there will be something wrong with your child if you don’t breast feed,both of my sons are thriving in fact my eldest son ended up in hospital while I was trying to breast feed him because he wasn’t getting enough milk maybe you should do some research yourself!

      1. Stay at Home Mum Avatar

        Hi Annoyed,
        You clearly are doing the best you can for your child and that is the main thing. 🙂

  3. Casey Avatar
    Casey

    I think this was a great article to post! Breast feeding does NOT work for everyone and I get sick of people judging mothers who bottle feed!

  4. AdoptiveMom Avatar
    AdoptiveMom

    I adopted and can’t breastfeed. I am SO sick of the self-satisfied and smug sancti-mommies who NEVER consider the women who have no choice but to use bottles and formula. Worry about your own babies. Thank you for this article. Those of us with NO CHOICE truly appreciate it.

  5. mumma2 Avatar
    mumma2

    I think it is a good article for mothers which are not able to feed Bubs. I was unable to feed my first baby and felt terrible guilt over it, I am currentl enjoying breast feeding my second. 2 totally different experience but both special in there own way

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