Best Breastfeeding Positions for Newborns: What Works and When to Switch
No one told you there would be this much geometry involved. You are trying to hold a baby, aim a breast, wait for the right mouth position, and not injure your back, all at the same time. And then someone says “have you tried the football hold?” like that helps.
Position matters more than most new moms realize. Not just for comfort. The way you hold your baby changes how deeply they can latch, how well they drain the breast, and whether you end up with cracked nipples or not. The good news is there are really only five positions worth knowing. Here is what each one does and when it earns its place.

Why Position Affects More Than Just Comfort
Before you pick a position, understand what it is actually doing. Every breastfeeding position is trying to solve the same mechanical problem: get the baby’s mouth lined up so it can open wide enough to take a deep mouthful of breast, not just the nipple.
The baby’s head needs to be free to tilt slightly back, nose pointing toward the nipple, chin leading into the breast. When the head is turned to the side or the chin is tucked, the baby cannot open as wide, and you get a shallow latch. Most positions work around this same goal differently based on where your hands are, where your baby’s weight goes, and where you are sitting or lying.
A shallow latch is the root of most early breastfeeding problems. If you are dealing with nipple pain, check out how to get a deep latch before you spend too much time position-hopping. Position and latch work together. Fixing only one and not the other rarely solves the problem.
Save this for later on Pinterest
Tap any design below to save it to your Pinterest board. Come back when you need it at 3 a.m.
Laid-Back Position (Biological Nurturing)

This is where most moms should start, especially in the first two weeks.
Lean back at about 45 degrees, fully supported. Lay your baby face-down on your chest, tummy to tummy, any angle that works. Their cheek ends up near your breast. You do not have to actively position their head. Their reflexes do most of the work.
This position takes advantage of primitive infant reflexes that are most active right after birth. Babies placed skin-to-skin on a reclined mom will often bob their head, root around, and self-latch with very little help. The latch they find this way is usually deeper than one you engineer manually.
It is also kinder to a sore or healing body. No hunching forward. No holding the baby up. Gravity holds them in place.
When to use it: The first two weeks, when nipples are tender and the baby is still learning to latch. Any time you feel a strong let-down that causes choking or spraying. Moms with very fast milk flow find laid-back slows the delivery.
Common mistake: Sitting too upright. If you are at 90 degrees, you are in cradle hold. Go further back until you feel the baby settle into your chest naturally.
Cross-Cradle Hold
This is the control position. Your opposite hand supports the baby’s head and neck (if feeding from the right breast, your left hand holds the baby’s head). The baby’s body goes across your lap or on a nursing pillow. Your other hand can shape the breast.
The difference between cross-cradle and regular cradle is where your hand is. In cradle, the baby’s head rests in the crook of your arm, which gives you less fine control. In cross-cradle, your hand is right at the back of the baby’s head and neck, so you can guide them in quickly once the mouth is open wide.
When to use it: When the latch is inconsistent and you need to actively guide the baby in. Great for the first 4 to 6 weeks before the baby has developed more head control. Also useful for premature babies or babies who tend to pull back right before latching.
Common mistake: Holding the back of the head and pushing. Do not push. Place your hand there for support and guidance, then wait for the mouth to open wide before bringing the baby in fast. Pushing a baby’s head onto the breast causes them to pull back or clamp.
Football Hold (Clutch Hold)
The best position after a C-section, and the most underused position overall.
Tuck the baby under your arm like a football, body along your side, feet pointing toward your back. The baby faces up toward the breast, and you support their head and neck with your palm. A nursing pillow under your arm takes the weight off your shoulder.
The baby’s weight stays completely off your abdomen. Your incision stays protected. And you have excellent visibility of the latch because the baby is in front of you, not across your body.
Football hold is also a strong option for moms with large breasts. You have more control over the breast and the baby’s head position than in cradle, and the baby is not getting their face buried.
When to use it: C-section recovery. Large breasts or flat nipples. Engorged breasts that have hardened and flattened the nipple — football hold gives you the control to guide the baby in after softening the areola. Twins (one on each side). A baby who keeps arching away in other positions.
Common mistake: Letting the baby’s body droop down. Keep the body horizontal, not angled down. A baby whose legs are lower than their head often pulls the nipple out of alignment.
Cradle Hold
This is the one in every brochure, and it works well, but not usually in the first 1 to 2 weeks.
Your baby’s head rests in the crook of your elbow. Their body runs along your forearm, belly to belly with you. The baby’s ear, shoulder, and hip should form a straight line.
The problem with cradle hold for newborns is that your arm is not giving you much control over where the baby’s head goes. As babies get a bit more head control, usually around 6 to 8 weeks, cradle becomes more comfortable because the baby does more of the work.
When to use it: After 4 to 6 weeks, once the baby can hold their head steady for a moment on their own. During longer feeds when you want a more relaxed arm position. During cluster feeding sessions when you will be nursing for an hour, this is often the most sustainable hold.
Common mistake: Hunching forward to bring the breast to the baby. Bring the baby up to you, not the other way around. A nursing pillow helps with this.
Side-Lying Position

For late-night feeds, this one keeps you from fully waking up.
Lie on your side, baby facing you, tummy to tummy. Your bottom arm can rest under your head or gently support the baby’s back. Line up nose to nipple as you would in any other position, then bring the baby in. You will feed from the bottom breast.
Side-lying reduces the physical and mental cost of a night feed. You do not have to sit up, turn on a light, or fully engage. Many moms find they can feed almost half-asleep once they get the latch right in this position.
Important: Once the feed is done, move the baby to their own sleep space. Side-lying feeding is fine. Falling asleep together on an adult mattress is not safe for newborns.
When to use it: Night feeds. Postpartum recovery when sitting is painful (perineal soreness or hemorrhoids). Extended cluster feeding sessions when you are exhausted. It pairs well with tracking feeds in the Latchly app, which you can do with one thumb.
Common mistake: Not repositioning after the first feed. If you switch breasts in side-lying, you will either roll over or pick the baby up. Have a plan for that before you start the feed so you do not end up in a half-awake tangle.
How Rotating Positions Helps Your Nipples
One thing most guides skip: rotating positions is one of the easiest ways to prevent and heal sore nipples. Every position creates friction in a slightly different spot. If you use only cradle hold for every feed, that same spot takes the hit over and over.
Switching between cross-cradle, football, and side-lying spreads the load. It also drains different parts of the breast, which can help if you have recurring plugged ducts in one area.
You do not have to use all five every day. Alternating between two or three throughout the day is enough to make a difference. If you are on the first 14 days of breastfeeding, this one habit will save you a lot of grief later.
When to Call Your Lactation Consultant
Call if you have any of these, regardless of which position you are using:
- Pain that lasts through the whole feed, not just the first 10 to 15 seconds
- Nipples that come out flat, lipstick-shaped, or white after every feed
- A clicking sound during feeds
- Baby falling asleep at the breast within 2 minutes every time before seeming full
- Any concern about whether baby is getting enough milk
A great position can compensate for a lot, but it cannot fix a tongue tie, thrush, or a supply issue by itself.
The Thing I Wish I Had Known

There is no perfect position. The best one is the one where your baby latches deep and you are not wincing.
In the first two weeks, try laid-back first. If that is not working, try cross-cradle. If nothing feels right and you are in real pain, that is not a position problem. That is a signal to see a lactation consultant.
Breastfeeding position is a tool, not a grade. You are not doing it wrong because you have not mastered the football hold yet. You are doing it right if your baby is fed, your nipples are intact, and you are breathing. That is enough for today.
If your supply is a concern alongside the position issues, learning what actually increases milk supply is a good next read. More drain, done consistently in a position that works for both of you, is the whole answer.


