Reference — Maternal-Newborn
Breast Milk Storage & Formula Prep Reference
Expressed milk is a precious, perishable resource — and formula is only as safe as the prep. The shortcut is the 4-4-6 rule: about 4 hours at room temperature, 4 days in the fridge, 6 months in the freezer.
Educational use only. Storage and preparation times are general guidance; hospitalized, preterm, or immunocompromised infants follow stricter facility protocols. Always confirm against current CDC/manufacturer guidance. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Breast Milk Storage — The 4-4-6 Rule
| Location | Keeps | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Room temperature (≤77°F / 25°C) | Up to ~4 hours | The '4' in 4-4-6 |
| Refrigerator (~40°F / 4°C) | Up to ~4 days | Store at the back, not the door |
| Freezer | About 6 months (best); up to ~12 months acceptable | Deep freezer keeps longest |
| Thawed (previously frozen), in fridge | Up to ~24 hours | Never refreeze thawed milk |
| Leftover from a started feed | Use within ~2 hours of starting, then discard | Saliva contaminates the bottle |
Thawing & Warming Rules
Use oldest milk first (date every container) and thaw in the fridge overnight or under warm running water.
Never microwave breast milk or formula — it heats unevenly, creates scald hot spots, and damages milk’s immune components. Warm in a bowl of warm water or a bottle warmer instead.
Never refreeze thawed milk. Swirl (don’t shake violently) to remix separated fat. Thawed milk may smell soapy from lipase — usually still safe.
Store in small portions (2–4 oz) to avoid waste, leave headspace for expansion when freezing, and label with date and time.
Safe Formula Preparation
Mix exactly per label — over-dilution starves the baby and risks water intoxication/hyponatremia; over-concentration stresses the kidneys and dehydrates. Never add extra water or cereal to a bottle unless prescribed.
Wash hands and clean the prep surface and bottles. For powdered formula in high-risk infants (preterm, <2–3 months, immunocompromised), use the precautions for Cronobacter — ready-to-feed or properly prepared formula per guidance, since powder is not sterile.
Prepared formula: use within ~2 hours at room temp or ~24 hours refrigerated; discard leftover formula from a started feeding within ~1 hour (saliva again). Don’t prop bottles (aspiration, ear infections, choking).
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦4-4-6: ~4 hours room temp, ~4 days fridge, ~6 months freezer for fresh breast milk.
- ✦Never microwave milk or formula — uneven heating scalds and destroys immune factors; warm in warm water.
- ✦Never refreeze thawed breast milk; use oldest first; thawed milk lasts ~24 h refrigerated.
- ✦Mix formula EXACTLY as directed — over-dilution causes water intoxication/hyponatremia; over-concentration dehydrates.
- ✦Discard milk/formula left from a started feeding (1–2 hours) — saliva contaminates it; don't prop bottles.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026This page is written to align with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) · AWHONN · American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — newborn. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
