The back of the can says 90ml per feeding. Your baby wants 30ml. Both can be right. Here is the math nobody explains.
I had a dad in my clinic last week. First baby. He had read three books, watched seventeen YouTube videos, and memorized the feeding chart on the formula can. His baby was eating 30ml every two hours. The chart said 90ml every three. He was panicking.
I asked him: "Is your baby gaining weight?" He said yes. "Is your baby content after feeds?" He said mostly. "Is your baby having wet diapers?" He said about eight a day. I told him: "Your baby is fine. The chart is wrong for your baby."
Here is the thing about those charts. They are averages. Averages include babies who eat 150ml per feed and babies who eat 20ml. Your baby is somewhere on that curve. The only way to know where is to watch your baby, not the can.
The standard calculation is 150ml per kg per day for newborns. A 3.5kg baby needs roughly 525ml per day. Divided by 8 feeds, that is about 65ml per feed. But some babies cluster feed. Some babies take tiny amounts constantly. Some babies tank up and then sleep for four hours. The math is a starting point, not a contract.
My twins were perfect examples. Emma ate exactly the calculated amount from day one. Jack ate half that and made up for it at night. Same formula, same parents, same womb, different appetites. By month three they were eating identical amounts. Bodies figure it out.
Signs your baby is getting enough:
- 6+ wet diapers per day after day 5
- Steady weight gain (15-30g per day for newborns)
- Content after most feeds
- Alert and active between feeds
Signs your baby might need more:
- Fussy within an hour of feeding, consistently
- Fewer than 5 wet diapers after day 5
- Not gaining weight by day 10
- Always rooting, never satisfied
Use our Formula Calculator to get a starting number, then adjust based on your baby. The calculator accounts for preemies, newborns, and older infants differently.
And remember — growth spurts happen. Week 2, week 3, week 6. Your baby will suddenly want 50% more. This is normal. Feed them. The amount will settle back down in a few days.