Calculator Inputs
Enter age, weight, feeding pattern, and formula share. The result appears above this form after submission.
Plotly Graph
The shaded band shows a general age-based milk range. Submitted results add current markers for total milk and formula share.
Example Data Table
These examples show how age, weight, feeding frequency, and formula share can change daily totals.
| Age | Weight | Method | Feeds/Day | Formula Share | Daily Formula | Per Feed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 mo | 8.2 lb | Age-based midpoint | 8 | 100% | 21.0 oz (621.0 mL) | 2.6 oz |
| 2.0 mo | 10.8 lb | Blended estimate | 7 | 100% | 27.5 oz (813.3 mL) | 3.9 oz |
| 4.0 mo | 14.2 lb | Blended estimate | 6 | 85% | 27.2 oz (804.4 mL) | 4.5 oz |
| 7.0 mo | 17.5 lb | Age-based midpoint | 5 | 75% | 18.0 oz (532.3 mL) | 3.6 oz |
| 10.0 mo | 20.0 lb | Weight-based rule | 4 | 60% | 16.8 oz (496.8 mL) | 4.2 oz |
Formula Used
Daily milk estimate = midpoint of the selected age band range.
Daily milk estimate = weight in pounds × 2.5 fluid ounces.
Daily milk estimate = (age-based estimate + weight-based estimate) ÷ 2.
Corrected age in months = chronological age in months − (weeks early ÷ 4.345).
Formula amount = total milk estimate × (formula share ÷ 100).
Per-feed formula = daily formula amount ÷ feeds per day.
The safety cap limits the final daily total. Growth spurt mode temporarily increases the estimate by 10% before the cap is applied.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the baby’s current age and choose days, weeks, or months.
- Add current weight and choose pounds or kilograms.
- Enter feeds per day to estimate bottle size per feed.
- Set formula share to 100% for exclusive formula feeding.
- Enter weeks early if you want corrected age considered.
- Choose age-based, weight-based, or blended estimation.
- Set a daily cap if you want a tighter upper limit.
- Use growth spurt mode only for short-term planning.
- Press calculate and review the summary above the form.
- Export the results as CSV or PDF if needed.
Parenting Note
This tool is an educational estimator, not a medical prescription. Hunger cues, growth, diaper output, reflux, prematurity, illness, and clinician guidance can all change feeding needs.
FAQs
1. Is this calculator a feeding prescription?
No. It gives an educational estimate. Babies can eat more or less depending on growth, hunger cues, health, and pediatric guidance.
2. Why does weight matter?
Weight helps personalize intake. A larger baby may need more total milk than another baby of the same age.
3. When should corrected age be used?
Corrected age can help for babies born early. It adjusts the age-based estimate so comparisons better match developmental timing.
4. Why is there a daily cap?
A cap prevents unusually high outputs from the formula. It is a planning control, not a strict rule for every baby.
5. What does formula share mean?
Formula share is the portion of total milk intake that comes from formula. For mixed feeding, set a percentage below 100.
6. Should solids replace formula after six months?
Usually no. Solids can complement milk feeds, but many babies still rely on formula or breast milk for a large share of nutrition.
7. How often should I recalculate?
Recalculate when age, weight, feeding frequency, or feeding style changes. A monthly check is often useful during the first year.
8. What if my baby seems hungry or full before finishing?
Follow feeding cues and discuss persistent concerns with a clinician. A calculator cannot replace real-time observation of your baby.