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Quick answer: For dedicated breastfeeding analysis, Huckleberry. For breastfeeding families who share night feeds with a partner or nanny, Pebbi. Both track per-breast nursing, but only Pebbi syncs between caregivers for free and works offline.
- The best breastfeeding tracker depends on whether you are tracking alone or sharing feeds with someone else.
- Per-breast tracking helps you alternate sides. Real-time sync helps your partner know when the last feed was without waking you.
- Huckleberry has a more detailed nursing timer but requires a shared login and internet connection.
Key takeaways
- The best baby tracker for breastfeeding depends on whether you are nursing solo or sharing overnight feeds with a partner, nanny, or family member.
- If breastfeeding is a team effort, your tracker needs to sync between two people in real time so the person doing the next feed knows what happened at the last one.
- Pebbi tracks per-breast nursing, works offline at 3am, and shares with your partner for free. Huckleberry offers deeper nursing analytics but requires internet and a shared login.
If frequent evening feeds are your main worry, see cluster feeding and is my breastfed baby getting enough milk for signs that feeding is going well.
What Breastfeeding Parents Actually Need from a Tracker
Not every feature in a baby tracker matters when you are breastfeeding. These are the ones that do.
| Feature | Why It Matters | When It Matters Most |
|---|---|---|
| Nursing timer (left/right breast) | Tracks duration and which side you used so you alternate correctly | Every feed in the early weeks |
| Pumping log | Records session output per side for supply monitoring | If you pump regularly or exclusively |
| Partner visibility of feeds | Your partner sees when and how long the last feed was without waking you | Overnight handoffs and nanny shifts |
| Offline logging | Works in hospital rooms, basements, and at 3am on airplane mode | Anywhere with poor signal |
| Next feed reminders | Alerts when it has been long enough since the last feed | Newborn period when feeds are tightly spaced |
If you are breastfeeding and tracking for yourself only, the nursing timer and reminders are enough. If someone else is also feeding your baby, whether from a bottle of expressed milk or a supplementary formula feed, partner visibility and real-time sync become the features that actually change your night.
Why Breastfeeding Is Also a Sharing Problem
Most breastfeeding tracker guides focus entirely on the nursing parent. That makes sense when you are the only person feeding the baby. But for many families, breastfeeding stops being a solo activity within the first few weeks.
You nurse at midnight. Your partner takes the 3am bottle so you can get a longer stretch of sleep. Your mother gives an expressed milk feed when she visits on Tuesday afternoons. The nanny covers three bottle feeds during the workday. In each of these moments, someone other than you needs to know what happened at the last feed: how long the session lasted, how much the baby took, whether they settled well, and roughly when the next feed is due.
Without a shared tracker, the answer to each of those questions is the same: wake up the nursing parent and ask. That defeats the entire purpose of handing off feeds. With a shared tracker, the partner picks up their phone at 3am, sees that the last feed ended at 12:15am and lasted 40 minutes, and knows exactly where things stand. No conversation needed. No waking the person who finally got to sleep.
Meanwhile, per-breast tracking solves a different problem entirely. Alternating sides matters for supply and comfort, but that is information for you as the nursing parent, not for your partner doing a bottle feed. A good breastfeeding tracker handles both: it helps you remember which side is next, and it helps your partner see when the baby last ate.
This is the gap that most breastfeeding-focused trackers miss. Huckleberry has an excellent nursing timer, but sharing requires everyone to use the same login credentials. That is impractical when a nanny is involved and a security concern for co-parents who need separate access. Glow Baby has solid breastfeeding features but wraps them in community forums and ads that many parents find intrusive during vulnerable overnight sessions.
Pebbi approaches breastfeeding from the coordination side. Each caregiver gets their own private access. You get per-breast tracking to manage your own alternation, and your partner gets a clear view of when and how long each feed was. The same timeline is visible to both parents in real time. Offline mode means the feed you log at 2am syncs to your partner's phone the moment either device reconnects. No ads, no community features, no account creation. It is not the most advanced breastfeeding analytics tool on the market, but it is the only one designed specifically for families where breastfeeding and care are shared between two people.
Best Baby Tracker Apps for Breastfeeding: Comparison for 2026
| App | Nursing Timer (L/R) | Pumping Log | Partner Sync (free) | Account Required | Works Offline | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pebbi | Yes | Yes | Yes (2 carers) | No | Yes | Shared breastfeeding and night feeds |
| Huckleberry | Yes (detailed) | Yes | No (shared login) | Yes | No | Solo nursing analysis and sleep |
| Glow Baby | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Breastfeeding with community support |
| Baby Tracker | Yes | Yes | No (Premium only) | Yes | No | Solo parents on a budget |
For a broader comparison across all use cases, see our full baby tracker comparison guide. For pricing detail on each app, see the baby tracker pricing comparison.
Huckleberry has the most detailed nursing timer available. It tracks left and right breast, duration, and integrates feed data into its sleep analysis engine. If you are nursing solo and your main interest is understanding feed patterns alongside sleep, Huckleberry is the strongest dedicated tool. The trade-off is that sharing requires your partner to log in with your credentials, there is no offline mode, and sleep predictions require Plus at $11.99/month or $68.88/year. For a full breakdown, see our Pebbi vs Huckleberry comparison.
Pebbi has a simpler nursing timer but it is built for the moment when care changes hands. Per-breast tracking helps you keep track of which side is next. Separately, the shared timeline means your partner instantly sees when the last feed happened and how long it lasted, which is what they actually need to decide whether the baby is due another feed. The free tier includes sync for two carers, so both parents are covered without paying. Offline mode means the 3am feed is logged whether you have signal or not.
Glow Baby offers solid breastfeeding tracking with active community forums where other nursing parents share advice and experiences. The trade-off is real: ads in the free tier, community features that expose your data, and no offline mode. For parents who value peer support during the breastfeeding journey, this may be acceptable. For parents who want privacy or find comparison stressful, it is not.
Baby Tracker covers the breastfeeding basics (left/right nursing, pumping, bottle feeds) with a clean interface. Sync requires Premium at $4.99/month, and sharing uses a single login rather than individual accounts. Solid for solo tracking, limited for shared care.
Tracking Pumping Sessions and Your Expressed Milk Stash
If you pump regularly alongside breastfeeding, whether to build a stash, for workday coverage, or exclusively, your tracker needs a separate pumping log that records output per side and sits alongside your feeding timeline.
The essential tracking loop: you log the pump session (time, duration, output per side). Your partner or nanny logs the bottle feed from that expressed milk. Both entries appear in the same timeline. Over time, you see how much you are producing, how much is being consumed, and what remains in storage.
Pebbi logs both pumping sessions and bottle feeds in one shared timeline, so both sides of the supply and consumption equation are visible to every caregiver. For a detailed walkthrough covering session logging, stash calculation, and sharing your pump data with a nanny, see our exclusive pumping tracker guide.
Setting Up Shared Breastfeeding Tracking with Your Partner
Getting two parents onto the same breastfeeding tracker takes less than two minutes with Pebbi.
- Both parents download Pebbi on their phone (iOS or Android).
- The first parent opens the app and starts tracking. No account or email needed.
- Open the Sync menu and generate a QR code.
- The second parent scans the QR code from their phone.
- Both phones now share the same baby timeline in real time.
From this point, every breastfeed you log appears on your partner's phone within seconds. Every bottle feed your partner logs appears on yours. Neither of you needs to send a text, leave a note, or wake the other to ask what happened.
For the full setup walkthrough, including adding a nanny or grandparent as a third caregiver, see the partner sharing guide or the nanny handover guide.
Shared breastfeeding tracking starts here. Pebbi is free for two carers, works offline, and requires no account. Download for iOS or Android.
