Breastfeeding Tees

Breastfeeding tees with feeding access in the wrap, the side seam, or the scoop neckline. Stripe panels, box-cut classics, longline wraps, cropped silhouettes, and ribbed basics. The everyday building block of a breastfeeding wardrobe, designed to be worn in real life.

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XS 46
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4X 46
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Breastfeeding Friendly 45
Bump Friendly 28
Beyond 15
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The breastfeeding tee, considered

A breastfeeding tee is the most worn piece in most mothers' wardrobes during the feeding years. We design them as if they were any other tee - with attention to fabric weight, fit, and detail - and integrate feeding access as a quiet structural feature. The collection covers four core access types: longline wraps with overlap fronts, ribbed scoop necks that stretch downward, drop-shoulder box-cuts with hidden side panels, and side-zip styles that open invisibly along the seam. All of them work for feeding, none of them announce it.

The edit ranges across stripe panels, plain ribbed jersey, waffle textures, embroidered detail, longline silhouettes, and crop cuts. Our comprehensive range of breastfeeding clothes includes everyday breastfeeding tops, elevated breastfeeding dresses, and cozy breastfeeding jumpers, alongside coordinated matching maternity sets that simplify styling. The same Ivy and Classique lines that anchor Apéro's regular tee edit run through this collection with feeding access added. This is intentional - feeding-friendly tees should look like the rest of your tee drawer. Most pieces will continue to work as regular tees once you stop breastfeeding, particularly the wrap and scoop-neck styles.

Frequently asked questions

  • A breastfeeding tee is a t-shirt designed with discreet feeding access built into the seams. The most common types use a wrap front that overlaps and lifts to one side, a hidden side zip, a stretchy scoop neckline, or a layered panel construction. Visually it looks like a regular tee. The access is invisible until you need it. A breastfeeding tee is the most-worn piece in most mothers' wardrobes during the feeding years, which is why we design them with the same fabric weight and detail as a regular tee rather than as utility wear with feeding modifications.

  • A nursing tee works through one of four mechanisms. The first is a wrap front, where two overlapping panels open by lifting one to the side. The second is a side zip, where a small zipper hidden in the side seam opens to expose a feeding panel. The third is a scoop or ribbed neck that stretches downward without distorting. The fourth is a layered or panelled construction, where a second concealed layer stays in place over your stomach while the outer layer lifts. Most nursing tees use one of these four mechanisms; the choice is mostly about which feels most natural for your routine.

  • The number of nursing tees you should have is typically three to five for comfortable daily rotation. Include a couple of long-sleeve options for cooler months, two or three short-sleeve options for warmer days, and one structured longline wrap or stripe panel for slightly polished moments. This is enough variety to dress without thinking through a week of feeding. Most mothers find that buying a small number of high-quality nursing tees is more satisfying than buying many cheaper ones, since these are the pieces you'll wear every day for months.

  • Yes, you can wear a regular tee while breastfeeding, but you will need to lift the tee entirely to feed, which exposes your stomach and bra below. Mothers might find this awkward in public. A nursing-specific tee lets you stay covered above and below the feeding point and is more discreet in public and other social settings. The convenience of integrated access is the main reason to choose a nursing tee over a regular one. For at-home feeding, a regular tee usually works fine; for public feeding, a nursing tee makes a clear difference.

  • Yes, nursing tees work for pumping, particularly the side-zip and wrap styles, which open without removing the top entirely. Front-opening nursing tees work well for hands-free pumping. Scoop-neck styles work for handheld pumps but are less convenient for hands-free wearable pumps. If you pump regularly, choose a tee with a clearly accessible side panel or wrap front for the most flexibility. The same access mechanism that works for breastfeeding generally works for pumping, though some pump-specific tops with dual front openings are designed specifically for pumping.