Solids for Babies

Can babies eat it?

Can babies eat Cow's Milk?

Avoid for now

Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months unless a clinician gives individual guidance.

Choose a safer alternative or wait until the age/risk changes.

At a glance

Age signal

Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months; dairy foods are handled separately.

Direct answer

Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months unless a clinician gives individual guidance.

Texture

Not a first drink for infants under 1 year.

Risk watch

Texture is not the main concern; age and nutrition role matter.

Texture, shape, and safety

Texture

Not a first drink for infants under 1 year.

Shape

Use breast milk or formula as the main milk drink before 12 months unless a clinician advises otherwise.

Choking watch

Texture is not the main concern; age and nutrition role matter.

Allergen note

Milk is a common allergen. Ask a clinician for known dairy allergy or prior reactions.

How guidance changes by age

  • Before 6 months: Before 6 months, use pediatric guidance. Readiness signs matter more than the calendar.
  • Around 6 months: Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months unless a clinician gives individual guidance.
  • 7 to 8 months: Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months unless a clinician gives individual guidance.
  • 9 to 11 months: Avoid cow's milk as a main drink before 12 months unless a clinician gives individual guidance.
  • 12 months plus: At 12 months and older, pasteurized whole cow's milk can become a drink option for many children.

What to do next

Use breast milk or infant formula as the main milk drink before 12 months.

Safer alternative: Plain pasteurized yogurt may be a different dairy food option after solids start, if appropriate.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Serving before baby shows readiness signs or while baby is reclined.
  • Leaving round, hard, slippery, sticky, or chewy shapes unchanged.
  • Adding honey for babies under 12 months or relying on added salt and sugar.
  • Trying a common allergen for the first time when baby is unwell, rushed, or not supervised.

When to ask a pediatric clinician

Milk is a common allergen. Ask a clinician for known dairy allergy or prior reactions.

Ask for individual guidance if baby has severe eczema, a known food allergy, prior reactions, swallowing concerns, poor growth, prematurity, or another medical condition that affects feeding.

Sources reviewed