6 Best Nursing Pillows of 2024, Tested by Parents
Safely position your baby for breastfeeding or bottle feeding.

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A nursing pillow helps you position your baby at a better height for feedings, no matter which of the many nursing positions you use. Newborns are so small and floppy that cradling them while they nurse or bottle feed can have you hunching your shoulders and tensing up; older babies are so heavy and wiggly that your back can get sore from the weight of them. "I was getting a lot of pain in my neck from looking down at my infant while feeding him, so elevating him on a pillow is very helpful," said a new mom who tested nursing pillows for us. You'll still have your arms wrapped around your baby, but much of their actual weight can rest on the pillow.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is expected to come out with new regulations for nursing pillows by the end of this year. More on that below, but it's looking as though nursing pillows will come with warnings about not using them for sleep, and that consumers will be guided toward nursing pillows stuffed with firm material rather than a soft pillow that conforms to your infant's body. A pillow filled with beads, for instance, can be a suffocation hazard for an infant. With that in mind, our pros at the Good Housekeeping Institute chose six nursing pillows that give your baby a firm base for feeding. We caution you to follow the American Academy of Pediatrics' rules for safe sleep, including never putting a pillow of any kind in your baby's sleep space.
Jessica (she/her) is a freelance writer with several decades of experience writing lifestyle content and evaluating home and parenting products. A mom of two teens and two cats, her previous work can be seen in American Baby and Parents.
Lexie Sachs (she/her) is the executive director of strategy and operations at the Good Housekeeping Institute and a lead reviewer of products in the bedding, travel, lifestyle, home furnishings and apparel spaces. She has over 15 years of experience in the consumer products industry and a degree in fiber science from Cornell University. Lexie serves as an expert source both within Good Housekeeping and other media outlets, regularly appearing on national broadcast TV segments. Prior to joining GH in 2013, Lexie worked in merchandising and product development in the fashion and home industries.
