Everything You Need to Know About Breast Milk Color

From yellow breast milk to red, green, and pink, here's everything you need to know about breast milk color and when it might be cause for concern.

If you pump—or freeze—your breast milk, you may have noticed that (sometimes) it's a different color. While breast milk is considered "liquid gold," it can take on various hues: from white and yellow to blue, green, and brown. But why does your breast milk change color, and are these changes cause for concern? We turned to the experts to learn everything you need to know about the color of your breast milk.

breast milk color

JESSICA OLAH

What Is the 'Normal' Color of Breast Milk?

While most nursing parents have white breast milk, or even light blue, there is no such thing as "normal." What is regular for one person may be different for you. The type of milk you are producing will also affect the shade. For example, colostrum—or the first form of milk produced by the mammary glands—is typically thick and yellow, though it can be runny and clear. The point is, if your milk isn't white, don't fret: at least not yet.

"There is a wide range of normal when it comes to color for breast milk," says Hali Shields, a certified birth and postpartum doula, national board-certified health and wellness coach, and certified lactation education counselor. "Blueish, yellow, cream, orange are all normal and safe for baby."

Breast Milk Color Changes by Stage

During the first few weeks after you have your baby, your breast milk changes quickly. Not only in composition and amount, but also in color.

Here are the normal changes in breast milk color by stage. 

Colostrum

Colostrum is the first breast milk that your body makes. You only make a small amount of colostrum, but it's concentrated and highly nutritious. While colostrum is sometimes clear, thin, and watery, it's more often yellow or orange and thick. The high levels of beta-carotene in colostrum give it its dark yellow or orange color.

Transitional Milk

After the first few days of colostrum, the production of breast milk increases and your body begins to make transitional milk. During this two week transition period, the color of breast milk typically changes from yellow to white as your milk comes in.

Mature Milk

After about two weeks, your body reaches the mature milk stage. Mature breast milk changes in appearance based on how much fat it contains.

  • Foremilk: In general, when the mature milk begins to flow out of your breast at the beginning of a feeding or pumping session, it is thinner and lower in fat. This milk is called the foremilk. Since foremilk is thin, it tends to look clear or bluish.
  • Hindmilk: As you continue to pump or breastfeed, the fat content in your milk goes up. As the fat increases, breast milk turns into creamier milk called hindmilk. Hindmilk has a thicker white or yellow appearance.

What Causes Yellow Breast Milk?

There are several reasons your breast milk may be yellow. If you just started breastfeeding, you will likely be secreting fluid which is thick and yellow in color (called colostrum). Eating foods high in beta-carotene—such as carrots, squash, and sweet potatoes— can also alter the hue of your milk. Your milk may also change shades when frozen. Sometimes, freezing breast milk can turn it slightly yellow.

What Makes Breast Milk White?

When your milk has transitioned from colostrum and becomes mature—or reached the final stage of milk production—it will (in most cases) take on a whitish hue. "Mature milk is usually white, light yellow, or has a blue tinge," Shields says. "Sometimes, it takes on the appearance of skim milk. However, it's important to note that while mature milk is typically white, it can change colors depending on your diet and from the foods you eat. Frozen breast milk may appear yellow since it separates and can even look layered."

Can Breast Milk Be Green—or Even Blue?

While blue breast milk is caused by a different set of circumstances than green breast milk, neither is cause for concern.

  • Blue breast milk is usually tinged as such because it is mature milk, or foremilk, which is thinner and contains less fat than its stark white counterpart, hindmilk. Your baby drinks foremilk at the start of the feeding and hindmilk at the end of it.
  • Green breast milk gets its color from dark green vegetables, like kale or spinach, and green food dyes in the breastfeeding parent's diet.

What Causes Breast Milk to Be Pink, Red, or Orange?

There are a few reasons why you may be producing pink, red, or orange milk. Demi Lucas, an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant and patient care coordinator with The Lactation Network, says pink milk—often referred to as strawberry milk—occurs when blood is present. This is usually the result of cracks in and/or around the nipple, as well as damage within the ducts. "Bright neon pink breast milk can be a sign of a bacterial infection," Lucas adds. "Red milk can be from food dyes, or can be blood from damage to the breast from breastfeeding or pumping.

Rusty Pipe Syndrome, which is harmless, is also a condition that can cause red-tinted breast milk." This condition occurs when old blood—left inside of the milk ducts from vascular breast engorgement—is released. But keep in mind, this is a rare occurrence; studies suggest that it affects 0.1% of breastfeeding people.

When to Call a Health Care Provider

While it can be alarming to see your breast milk change color, most of the aforementioned changes are not cause for concern, and many color variations are benign. However, if your breast milk remains blood-tinged for a few days or more, you should probably contact a health care provider, as pink or red breast milk can be indicative of other issues. Similarly, always be sure to reach out to a health care provider anytime you have questions or challenges surrounding breastfeeding.

You should also contact your healthcare provider if your breast milk is black. Black and/or brownish breast milk is usually caused by herbs or medications and it's important you make sure said medications are safe to take while breastfeeding.

Additional reporting by Donna Murray, RN, BSN.

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Sources
Parents uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
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  2.  Human breast milk: A review on its composition and bioactivity. Early Human Development.

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