Ready to Wean? A Gentle, Practical Guide for Moms Beginning the Breastfeeding Transition

Last Updated: May 25, 2026By

There’s a moment that sneaks up on so many moms.

One day you’re counting newborn feeds around the clock, wondering if you’ll ever sleep again… and the next you’re realizing your breastfeeding journey may be coming to an end.

First, if you’re even wondering how to wean… congratulations! I know that nursing is the goal for so many mamas, and not everyone is able to get there for a hundred different reasons. Whether you breastfed for two weeks, six months, two years, or somewhere in between, you fed and comforted your baby, and that’s worth taking a moment to celebrate.

But if you are getting ready to wean, just know this: it’s usually not a one-day process. It’s an emotional, mental, and physical transition for both baby and mom. Some babies adjust quickly. Some protest every change. Some moms are ready. Some are surprisingly emotional about it, even when they know it’s time.

All of that is normal.

The biggest thing? Give yourself grace and be patient with both your baby and yourself.

Start slowly if you can

One of the hardest ways to wean is to stop cold turkey unless you medically have to. Gradual tends to be easier on everyone — baby’s emotions, your hormones, and your milk supply.

Instead of dropping every feeding at once, try eliminating one feeding at a time every few days or every week, depending on how things are going.

Most moms find daytime feeds easiest to drop first. Bedtime and early morning feeds are often the hardest because they’re so closely tied to comfort and routine.

Introduce the bottle consistently

If your baby will be transitioning to bottles, start offering them regularly before you fully stop nursing.

A lot of babies reject bottles at first simply because they’re unfamiliar. Consistency helps. Offer breast milk in a bottle gradually and increase how often it’s offered so it becomes part of the routine rather than a surprise.

And if your baby refuses it from you? That’s incredibly common.

Let someone else help

This is a huge one.

Until your milk dries up, babies strongly associate mom with nursing and comfort. Sometimes they settle much easier with someone else because they know nursing isn’t an option.

If possible, let your spouse, partner, grandparent, caregiver, or trusted friend help with:

  • Bottle feeds
  • Bedtime
  • Naps
  • Comforting
  • Middle-of-the-night wakeups

It can honestly make the transition smoother for everyone.

Don’t automatically offer nursing first

This one can be hard because nursing becomes the default solution for basically everything.

Hungry? Nurse.
Tired? Nurse.
Bored? Nurse.
Sad? Nurse.
Overstimulated? Nurse.

When you’re actively weaning, try pausing before immediately nursing every time the baby gets upset.

Sometimes another comfort works just as well:

  • Rocking
  • Snuggles
  • A walk outside
  • A favorite snack (if age appropriate)
  • Music
  • A cup of milk or water (if old enough)
  • Distraction with play
  • Reading books together

Not every tear means they still need to nurse. Sometimes it’s just habit and familiarity.

Expect some big feelings

From both of you.

Babies thrive on routine, and nursing is more than food. It’s comfort, closeness, regulation, and security. It makes sense that there may be frustration during the transition.

But moms are often caught off guard by their own emotions, too.

Even when you’re ready to be done, weaning can still feel bittersweet. Hormone shifts are real, and so is the realization that another stage of babyhood is coming to an end.

You are not dramatic if you feel emotional about it.

Take care of your body, too

Weaning too quickly can leave you painfully engorged.
If you’re uncomfortable:
  • Hand express just enough for relief instead of fully emptying (so you don’t trigger more milk production)
  • Use cold packs
  • Try putting chilled cabbage leaves in your bra to dry you up
  • Wear a supportive sports bra
  • Take ibuprofen if needed and safe for you
Again, repeatedly emptying your breasts fully can signal your body to keep producing more milk, so relief — not full pumping sessions — is usually the goal during weaning, unless your doctor directs otherwise.

Bedtime can be the hardest

For many babies, bedtime nursing is the last feed of the day.
A few things that can help:
  • Create a new bedtime routine before dropping the feed
  • Add books, rocking, songs, or a special blanket
  • Let another caregiver handle bedtime temporarily if possible
  • Offer a snack and drink before bed for older babies/toddlers
Consistency matters more than perfection here.

There is no “perfect” way to wean

Some babies self-wean naturally.
Some need a slow transition.
Some moms are emotional.
Some are very ready to have their bodies back.

None of those experiences are wrong.

If you’re in the middle of it right now, just know: it usually gets easier after the first stretch of adjustment. What feels huge and emotional today eventually becomes the new normal.

You’ve got this, mama. It just takes a minute. 🩵

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