You’re staring at the number on the hospital scale, and it’s lower than what was written on your baby’s birth chart two days ago. Nobody warned you this would happen. Your mind goes straight to the worst place: is my baby not getting enough? Did I do something wrong?
Take a breath. This is one of the most universally misunderstood parts of the newborn period, and once you understand what’s actually happening, the worry mostly evaporates.
Why Newborns Lose Weight in the First Place
Every baby is born carrying extra fluid — a kind of biological buffer from the womb. It’s normal for newborns to lose weight in the first few days after birth. Losing 5 to 10 percent of birth weight in the first few days is completely normal.
This isn’t your baby failing to feed well. It’s your baby shedding excess fluid while their digestive system gets the hang of actually processing milk — colostrum in those first days, then transitional and mature milk as your supply builds, or formula if that’s your feeding path. Newborns will take about 2 to 3 ounces every 3 hours of breastmilk in those early days, and that intake takes a little time to catch up with the fluid loss.
The threshold your pediatrician actually cares about:
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no greater than 7% weight loss for all newborns. It has been shown that newborns who lose greater than 7% are at highest risk for developing hyperbilirubinemia and hypernatremia.
So there’s a meaningful difference between “lost a little weight, totally fine” and “lost enough weight that we need to look at feeding more closely.” A loss of more than 10 percent of birth weight in the newborn period is something your pediatrician will want to monitor closely, as it can sometimes signal feeding challenges.
If your baby’s weight loss is creeping toward or past that 7–10% range, that’s not automatically an emergency — but it is your pediatrician’s cue to dig into feeding technique, supply, and whether supplementation might help in the short term.
When Do Babies Bottom Out, and When Do They Bounce Back?
The maximum weight lost was 4.4%, which occurred on day three. Day three is genuinely the low point for most babies — which happens to line up almost exactly with when a breastfeeding parent’s milk is transitioning from colostrum to higher-volume mature milk. It’s not a coincidence that the hardest day on the scale and the hardest day at the breast often fall together.
Most babies regain that weight within 10 to 14 days. Healthy babies typically regain their birth weight by 10 to 14 days of age. If your baby is not back to their birth weight by two weeks, your pediatrician will want to see them to assess feeding and overall health.
That two-week mark is the real checkpoint. Not day three, not day five — two weeks. If your baby is back to their birth weight by then, everything that happened before that point was the expected dip, not a problem.

What Happens After the Dip: Weekly Weight Gain You Can Actually Use
Once your baby turns the corner and starts climbing back up, here’s the pattern most healthy babies follow.
| Age Range | Typical Weight Gain | What This Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| Birth to ~day 3 | Loss of 5–10% of birth weight | Normal fluid shedding |
| Day 10–14 | Back to birth weight | The real recovery checkpoint |
| 0–4 months | 5 to 7 ounces per week | Roughly 1 oz/day |
| 4–6 months | Gradual slowdown begins | Growth still steady but less rapid |
| 6–12 months | 3 to 5 ounces per week | Growth velocity naturally decreasing |
Most healthy babies double their birth weight by 4 to 5 months and triple it by their first birthday. Newborn babies typically gain around 30 grams (1 ounce) per day until they reach three months. From three to six months, a baby will gain about 20 grams (0.67 ounces) daily, and from six to twelve months, their growth slows to approximately 10 grams (0.35 ounces) per day.
What’s worth noticing here: growth isn’t a straight line. It’s fast, then it tapers, then it tapers again. A baby gaining less at nine months than they did at one month isn’t slowing down because something’s wrong — that’s just how growth curves work for every healthy baby.
Breastfed vs. Formula-Fed: A Real Difference, Not a Red Flag
Healthy breastfed infants tend to grow more rapidly than their formula-fed peers in the first 2-3 months of life and less rapidly from 3 to 12 months.
If you’re feeding two ways or comparing notes with another parent who feeds differently than you do, this matters. A breastfed baby gaining slightly less than a formula-fed baby at eight months isn’t evidence that breast milk is “not enough” — it’s a well-documented normal pattern. Pediatricians who track growth charts know this, which is part of why the WHO growth charts (built primarily from breastfed infant data) are now the standard reference for the first two years.
The Growth Chart Isn’t About Hitting a Number
Pediatricians track infant weight using standardized growth charts developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The goal is not for your child to hit a certain percentile, but to grow consistently along their own curve over time.
This is the part that trips up a lot of new parents who fixate on percentiles like they’re a school grade. A baby steadily tracking the 15th percentile month after month is doing exactly what they’re supposed to do. Weight changes only become a concern if a child or baby experiences a sudden and significant drop or gain across multiple percentiles — meaning the trend line matters far more than any single number.
When to Actually Worry
Most of the anxiety around newborn weight comes from comparing your baby to a number you saw online rather than looking at your baby’s actual pattern and feeding behavior. That said, there are real signals worth flagging to your pediatrician right away rather than waiting for the next scheduled visit:
- Weight loss exceeding 7–10% of birth weight in the first days
- Not back to birth weight by the two-week mark
- A sudden drop across multiple percentile lines on the growth chart at any point
- Fewer than 6 wet diapers a day after the first week
- A baby who seems unusually sleepy, hard to wake for feeds, or who isn’t producing the expected number of dirty diapers
- Visible jaundice that’s worsening, alongside poor weight gain (this combination is part of why the 7% threshold exists in the first place — babies who lose greater than 7% are at highest risk for developing hyperbilirubinemia)
If any of these apply, your pediatrician’s response usually isn’t panic — it’s a closer look at feeding. That might mean a lactation consultant assessing your latch, a weighted feed to see exactly how much milk your baby is transferring, or in some cases temporary supplementation while you sort out supply. If you’re concerned supply itself might be the issue, our guide on low milk supply walks through how to tell and what actually helps.

A Note on Comparison
Every baby on this planet has a slightly different starting weight, a slightly different growth trajectory, and a slightly different rhythm. A newborn’s weight depends on factors including the baby’s health, the length of the pregnancy, the mother’s health and nutrition during pregnancy, and when the baby was born.
Your sister’s baby gaining faster than yours, or your friend’s group chat comparing ounces like a competitive sport, tells you almost nothing useful about whether your specific baby is thriving. The only comparison that actually matters is your baby against their own curve over time — which is exactly what your pediatrician is checking at every well visit.
If you’ve been losing sleep over a single weigh-in, bring your concern to your next appointment and ask to see the trend line, not just the latest number. It almost always brings the reassurance that a single scary number on its own can’t.
Myth vs. Fact
Myth: Any weight loss after birth means something is wrong with feeding. Fact: It’s normal for newborns to lose weight in the first few days after birth regardless of feeding method. Up to 7% loss is within the expected range the AAP considers normal.
Myth: Babies should gain weight at a steady, unchanging rate every single week. Fact: Growth comes in bursts and naturally slows over the first year. A baby’s growth is not constant. It naturally comes in bursts. Comparing week-to-week without looking at the broader trend creates unnecessary worry.
Myth: A baby in a lower percentile is falling behind. Fact: Percentile position alone means very little. The goal is not for your child to hit a certain percentile, but to grow consistently along their own curve over time.
Myth: Formula-fed babies who gain faster early on are healthier than breastfed babies. Fact: Healthy breastfed infants tend to grow more rapidly in the first 2–3 months and less rapidly from 3–12 months compared to formula-fed peers — a documented, normal difference in growth pattern, not a health indicator either way.

Frequently Asked Questions
Not panic, but it’s worth a closer conversation with your pediatrician or a lactation consultant. The AAP recommends no greater than 7% weight loss as the general benchmark, so 8% is just above that line. Often this means a closer look at latch and feeding frequency rather than an emergency — but it’s exactly the kind of number that deserves a proactive call rather than waiting it out.
Most pediatricians schedule a weight check around day 3–5 and again around day 10–14 specifically to confirm your baby has regained their birth weight. If your baby was born with significant weight loss or feeding concerns, your provider may want more frequent checks in between.
This pattern is worth raising with your pediatrician and possibly an IBCLC — frequent feeding with inadequate weight gain can point to a latch issue limiting how much milk is actually transferred, even when your baby is at the breast often. Our breastfeeding latch guide covers what an effective latch looks and feels like.
Yes, completely. From six to twelve months, their growth slows to approximately 10 grams (0.35 ounces) per day — a natural deceleration that happens for every healthy baby, not a sign that something has changed for the worse.
A single shift like this, especially if your baby is still feeding well, alert, and producing normal wet and dirty diapers, often isn’t cause for alarm — babies can settle into a slightly different growth channel than their birth percentile suggested. What your pediatrician watches for is a dramatic, sudden drop across multiple percentile lines, which is a different and more specific signal than a modest single-line shift.
Sources
- Fed Is Best Foundation — Newborn Weight Loss Calculator and AAP Guidelines, April 2026
- Idaho Falls Pediatrics — What Is a Normal Weight Gain for Babies?, March 2026
- Mayo Clinic — Infant Growth: What’s Normal?, September 2025
- Summer Health — Average Baby Weight and Height: Everything You Need to Know
- National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) / NCBI Bookshelf — Faltering Growth: Weight Loss in the Early Days of Life
- NCBI / PMC — Changes in the Body Weight of Term Infants During the First Seven Days of Life
- World Health Organization (WHO) / CDC — Growth Charts
- American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — Newborn Weight Loss Guidelines
All information reflects evidence available as of 2026.


