
Published: April 9, 2026
Updated: April 9, 2026
Engorgement and mastitis are common challenges, especially when you first start producing breast milk. The pediatric pros at Solid Starts explain the difference between engorgement and mastitis, how to spot the signs, and what you can do to feel better.
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✔ Engorgement and mastitis are different but related
Engorgement often happens when you first start nursing or pumping, but can occur anytime during your breastfeeding journey. The breasts feel very full, swollen, and painful. If not addressed, it can turn into mastitis, a more serious problem.
✔ Engorgement and mastitis treatments depend on severity
Mild cases get better with cold compresses, rest, and anti-inflammatory medicine like ibuprofen to reduce swelling. More serious cases with high fever and bacterial infection require antibiotics.
✔ Ask for help early and keep nursing or pumping if you can
Your breast milk is safe for baby even if you have mastitis. The key is to address problems as soon as you notice them and get support from your doctor or lactation consultant before things get worse. If you have a fever, redness, or a lump, seek medical care right away.
In the first days of breastfeeding, it can feel like your body isn't your own. Milk comes in, hormones shift, and baby is still figuring out how to feed—and your breasts may feel hard, hot, heavy, and painfully full.
Some fullness is expected. But when swelling and poor milk drainage happen together, your breasts can become engorged. If engorgement isn't treated, it can lead to mastitis over time.
Mastitis doesn't always mean you have an infection—it's a spectrum. It can start with clogged milk ducts and, if untreated, get worse over time:
Clogged milk ducts cause pain and swelling when milk can't flow freely.
Breast inflammation develops next, with redness or darker skin, warmth, and pain spreading as your body reacts to the blockage.
Infectious mastitis occurs when bacteria enter the area, often causing fever and flu-like symptoms.
Phlegmon is a more serious stage, where a dense, swollen area forms deep in the breast tissue—but without a pocket of pus yet.
Breast abscess is the most serious stage: a walled-off pocket of pus that usually needs to be drained by a medical provider, along with antibiotics.
Here's something that surprises a lot of families: engorgement doesn’t just happen because there is too much milk in your breasts.
Engorgement happens when there is milk plus extra fluid in the breast tissue plus increased blood flow to the breast—all happening at once. That combination of pressure from multiple sources is why it can feel so intense, and why simply "emptying the breast" doesn't always bring relief the way you'd expect.
The swelling itself can actually make it harder for milk to move out. So the fuller your breast feels, the more backed up things can get, which is exactly why it’s important to address engorgement early and thoughtfully rather than aggressively.
The most common contributors to engorgement are:
Baby’s latch is shallow or ineffective
Baby is sleepy and hard to waken for feeds
Baby is jaundiced (which makes them extra drowsy)
Baby has an oral restriction (tongue tie) that limits how well they can draw milk
Baby switches breasts before the first breast is well-drained
Flat or inverted nipples make latching harder
Early formula supplementation
Abrupt weaning
IV fluids during labor (which cause extra tissue fluid to end up in the breast)
Sometimes milk takes longer (11 to 13 days) to come in when you have a C-section. Because your milk arrives a little later, your body and your baby may need a little extra time to get in sync, which can lead to engorgement happening along the way.
A note: If you have a high fever, feel very ill, or have breast redness that's spreading quickly and getting worse, please seek immediate medical care. Don't wait to see if it improves on its own.
Signs | Engorgement | Mastitis |
Happen in | Both breasts | One breast (wide area) |
Pain | Dull, pressure-like | Intense, sharp |
Redness | None or mild | Wedge-shaped, bright red |
Skin feel | Warm, tight | Hot to the touch |
Fever | Rarely, low-grade | High (100.4°F / 38°C+) |
Flu-like symptoms | No | Chills, aches, fatigue |
Improves after feeding | Yes | Not significantly |
Treatment | Frequent feeds, cold compress | Antibiotics required |
In the first few days after birth—usually around days 3 to 5—your body makes a big change. During this period, your breast milk fully comes in, switching from the early milk (called colostrum) to regular breast milk. As your body makes more milk, your breasts may also swell. This combination of extra milk and swelling is normal, and it is called physiologic engorgement.
What it typically feels like:
Both breasts feel larger, warm, and firm—sometimes noticeably so
The skin may look stretched or slightly shiny
There's a throbbing, aching pressure
Feeding brings at least some relief
A low-grade fever that comes and goes during this transition can also be normal, and generally nothing to worry about on its own. If fever persists, worsens, or climbs above 38.5°C (101.3°F), call your provider to discuss your symptoms.
Engorgement is temporary and does not worsen or progress to mastitis when it is well-managed. Your goal is to support your body through engorgement and help it pass. There are also a few ways to help prevent engorgement from happening:
Nurse within the first hour after birth when possible
Feed on demand—watch your baby's cues, not the clock
Let your baby finish the first breast before switching
Get latch and positioning support early; don't wait until something is wrong
If baby can't nurse effectively, hand express breast milk or pump consistently from the start to protect your supply and prevent backup
Engorgement becomes a problem when the breasts become so firm that your baby can’t latch, which means less milk is removed, which makes the swelling worse. It’s a vicious cycle.
Signs that engorgement has become problematic:
Breasts are rock hard and shiny-tight
Even gentle touch is very painful
You can barely hand-express even a small amount of milk
Baby cannot latch at all, or is slipping off repeatedly
A particularly frustrating variation is areolar engorgement, where the swelling concentrates around the nipple and areola specifically, making it nearly impossible for baby to get a deep latch. This is where reverse pressure softening becomes essential.
The most important thing you can do is feed your baby frequently and effectively. That doesn't mean every 45 minutes around the clock, but it does mean at least 8 to 12 times over a 24-hour period, with good latch and positioning. Frequent, effective draining of the breast is the foundation everything else builds on.
Next, treat engorgement like an inflammation problem:
Cold compress. After feeding, apply a cold pack or chilled gel pack for about 20 minutes, with a cloth between the pack and your skin. This helps reduce tissue congestion, blood flow, and pressure.
Anti-inflammatories. If appropriate, an anti-inflammatory medicine like ibuprofen (if you're able to take it) helps alleviate the actual inflammation driving the engorgement, not just the pain. Ask your doctor to ensure it is safe for you to take.
Gentle breast massage. Your lymphatic system normally collects fluid from body tissues and moves it back toward the heart. When there are problems—like engorgement—fluid can build up and cause swelling. A gentle breast massage helps move that fluid from the breast tissue toward the lymph nodes, where the body can clear it out.
Use light, sweeping strokes (not kneading or digging) to move fluid toward your armpit and collarbone. The goal is to help your lymphatic system do its job, not to manually squeeze milk out. Deep, forceful kneading can increase tissue swelling, cause injury to breast tissue, and in later stages of mastitis, can actually contribute to the development of a phlegmon—a pre-abscess inflammatory mass.
A supportive, comfortable bra. Proper support also aids lymphatic drainage and reduces pain with movement.
Don't over-pump. Pumping significantly beyond what your baby needs tells your body to make even more milk, which makes swelling worse, not better. If you pump for comfort, pump only to the point of comfort—not to empty.
If your baby cannot latch because the areola is too firm, reverse pressure softening is the tool to reach for first. It works by temporarily moving fluid away from the areola so baby can latch.
How to do it:
Place your fingertips or thumbs right at the base of the nipple, as close to the areola as possible
Press gently but firmly inward, toward the chest wall, and hold for 60 seconds
Latch baby immediately—you have a short window before the fluid shifts back
If needed, hand-express just enough to soften the areola slightly before trying RPS
The key word here is soften, not drain. You're not trying to remove milk; you're making space for a latch.
Chilled cabbage leaves have been used for generations, but controlled trials have not shown cabbage to be significantly more effective than cold compresses for relieving engorgement. Some find them soothing—but they're comfort care, not a primary treatment.
If you use them: keep them clean, limit sessions to about 20 minutes, and avoid prolonged daily use, as some evidence suggests overuse can reduce milk supply. Skip them entirely if you have a sulfa allergy.
Get in touch with your doctor or lactation consultant if you notice:
Your baby cannot latch at all, even after trying reverse pressure softening
You can't express even a small amount of milk
Fever at or above 38.5°C (101.3°F)
Pain that's getting worse rather than better, especially on one side only
A red, warm, or hardened area on one breast
Symptoms that feel more like the flu—body aches, chills, exhaustion
These can signal a shift from normal engorgement toward mastitis, and that shift matters for how you treat it.
The old advice was, “Heat, rest, empty the breast.” The current evidence tells a more nuanced story.
For an inflamed breast—and even early bacterial infection—the first priority is bringing down the inflammation, not ramping up milk removal:
Cold after feeds (as with engorgement)
Ibuprofen (if safe for you): this is first-line, not an afterthought
Rest as much as possible, and stay well-hydrated
Continue nursing if you can—normal feeding keeps milk moving and it is safe for your baby. Mastitis is not contagious.
Adjust position for your comfort (pointing their chin toward the affected area may help with drainage, but it’s not fully supported by the literature). If your baby is not nursing, pump to replace missed feeds—not more than that.
And again: no deep massage, no dangle feeding, no aggressive pumping. These approaches can worsen inflammation and tissue injury.
This is a big change for the medical community, as it’s recommended now that antibiotics be reserved for bacterial mastitis, because they do nothing for inflammatory mastitis and can disrupt the natural microbial balance of the breast.
Signs that bacterial mastitis is likely and a visit to your medical provider is warranted:
Systemic symptoms (fever, chills, rapid heart rate) that persist more than several hours
Local symptoms not improving—or getting worse—despite supportive care
You feel genuinely, significantly unwell
An abscess forms when bacterial mastitis progresses to a walled-off pocket of infection. It occurs in approximately 3–11% of mastitis cases.
Signs of a possible abscess:
A growing lump that feels fluid-filled or has a soft spot within it
Fever that keeps returning, even after starting antibiotics
Symptoms that just aren't getting better
Most families can continue breastfeeding from the unaffected side and often from the affected side as well with guidance from their clinical team. If you suspect you have an abscess, consult your doctor as soon as possible.
There are a few steps you can take to prevent mastitis:
Catching and treating a clogged milk duct before a fever develops is the single most effective prevention strategy for mastitis.
Keep your breast milk moving with regular nursing, hand expression, or pumping. Avoid long gaps between nursing or pumping, especially in the early weeks.
Feed on demand and adjust your pumping schedule to mirror their feeding pattern. This helps sync your milk supply with their intake and avoids pumping a lot more than they need, which can worsen breast engorgement. If oversupply is present, work with a lactation consultant on regulation strategies.
Ensuring the baby is properly latched as a poor latch is a common contributing factor to breast engorgement and mastitis.
Avoid abrupt weaning. Gradual reduction in feeds gives the body time to adjust your milk supply downward.
Treat nipple cracks. This way, you can avoid the damaged skin serving as an entry point for bacteria.
Avoid underwire bras, tight bras, or bra worn to sleep that create pressure points on ducts.
There's emerging evidence that probiotics may reduce the risk of mastitis compared to placebo, though the quality of evidence is still considered low. The idea is that diverse, balanced microbial communities in breast tissue may be protective against the kind of microbial imbalance that can drive mastitis. Incorporating fermented foods with live cultures—such as yogurt, kefir, or kimchi—is a reasonable, low-risk approach to supporting microbial diversity.
Note that a history of mastitis is a risk factor for recurrence, and you can talk to your doctor or lactation consultant to get extra support and monitoring. Fatigue and stress are also significant risk factors because they suppress the body’s immune response and often correlate with skipped or shortened feeds. Plenty of rest, staying hydrated, and eating a nourishing diet helps protect your immune function and manage fatigue and stress.
Seek immediate medical attention if you have:
Fever plus chills or flu-like symptoms AND a hot, red, painful area on one breast
Redness or pain that is visibly spreading or rapidly getting worse
A lump that's growing, very tender, and may feel fluid-filled
Symptoms that are not improving after 12 to 24 hours of appropriate supportive care
You feel genuinely unwell—weak, dizzy, dehydrated, or worse than you should
When in doubt, call. You don't need to wait until something is obviously wrong to reach out for support—and that's what your lactation consultant and lactation-friendly providers are here for.
The goal is comfort, not emptying. Hand express or pump just enough to soften the breast and relieve pressure. Usually 1 to 2 minutes is enough to soften the breast and provide comfort. Hand expression is typically easier because feeling the breast soften with your hands helps you know when to stop. There is no need to pump or hand express until the milk stops flowing. Removing too much milk signals the body to make more, worsening the cycle.
Feed on demand and do not add pumping sessions beyond what baby needs. Your goal is to let baby regulate your milk supply without adding stimulation to produce more milk. Very gentle, light-touch massage from the breast toward the armpit and collarbone can help move inflammatory fluid without stimulating more milk production. You can also apply a cold compress between feeds for 15 to 20 minutes to help reduce inflammation and suppress some milk production over time. Avoid prolonged heat before feeds except immediately before to encourage the letdown; heat increases blood flow and can worsen swelling. Anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen (if safe for you) can also help with swelling and discomfort without affecting supply.
Normal breast engorgement typically peaks 3 to 5 days postpartum and resolves within 24 to 48 hours with frequent, effective feeding and/or pumping (with feeding going well and breast milk being removed regularly)
Consult your doctor if breast engorgement leads to fever, redness, and flu-like symptoms lasting more than 12 to 24 hours. They may prescribe antibiotics to help treat mastitis.
Yes. Engorgement that is not adequately addressed is one of the most common contributors to mastitis. That said, engorgement doesn't automatically become mastitis. If engorgement is managed appropriately—frequent effective feeding, cold therapy, anti-inflammatories, gentle breast massage—it should not progress further along the spectrum. The risk goes up when engorgement is severe and prolonged, when milk removal is consistently incomplete, or when the breast microbiome is already disrupted.
Engorgement and mastitis exist on a spectrum, and the lines can be blurry. A key clue is whether symptoms are happening on one breast or both breasts, and if you feel sick, not just sore. If both breasts feel hard or full and you do not have a fever, it is likely engorgement. A red, hot wedge on one breast with a fever is likely mastitis. It is important to consult your doctor or lactation consultant because the distinction matters for treatment.
You will notice a clearly defined warm swollen area that is often wedge-shaped following the path of a milk duct. You may notice a firm, tender lump or thickened skin beneath the swollen area, which can appear red or darker than your skin tone. Your skin will look shiny or stretched over the affected area.
You may also look and feel sick, with a flushed face, glassy eyes, visible fatigue, shivers, and chills.
With prompt and appropriate management, most feel significantly better within 24 to 48 hours with full resolution of symptoms within 7 to 10 days. If antibiotics are prescribed, it's critical to complete the full course even if you are feeling better; stopping early is a common cause of recurrence.
Without treatment or with delayed treatment, mastitis can progress to abscess within days. If symptoms are not improving after 48 to 72 hours on antibiotics, consult your doctor and do not delay. The antibiotic may not be covering the right organism, or an abscess may be forming.
Yes. Keep breastfeeding or pumping as you normally would. It's safe, and your baby won't get sick. Avoid pumping to "fully drain" the breast on top of nursing. Over-pumping stimulates more milk production, which can perpetuate swelling and inflammation, potentially worsening mastitis rather than resolving it.
About 1 in 5 breastfeeding parents will get mastitis—that's around 20%. It's most common in the first few weeks after birth, but it can happen at any point while breastfeeding.
The treatment depends on whether you're dealing with an inflamed breast, a bacterial infection, or worse. Many cases of inflammatory mastitis resolve within 12 to 24 hours after applying a cold compress, resting, and taking an anti-inflammatory medicine like ibuprofen if safe for you. You should continue to nurse or pump as you normally would do to keep milk moving. Avoid deep massage and aggressive pumping—these can worsen inflammation and delay recovery.
Bacterial mastitis often involves a persistent fever ≥ 101.3 F (38.5 C) for more than several hours or symptoms clearly worsening despite supportive care. Your doctor can help prescribe antibiotics for treatment.
Written By
K. Grenawitzke, OTD, OTR/L, SCFES, IBCLC, CNT, Pediatric Feeding/Swallowing Specialist
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