Breastfeeding Tops

Breastfeeding tops with feeding access built into wraps, zips, panels, and ribbed scoop necks. Long-sleeve knits, button-down shirts, soft jersey tanks, and structured layering pieces designed to be worn in real life. Discreet enough for school pickup, structured enough for the office.

Filter
$
$
Adult
XS 71
S 71
M 71
L 71
XL 71
2X 71
3X 71
4X 71
Beige
Black
Blue
Brown
Cream
Green
Grey
Multi
Navy
Pink
Purple
White
Breastfeeding Friendly 70
Bump Friendly 51
Beyond 30
Filter
Out of stock
Size
Down
Colour
Down
Maternity
Down
Sort by
Down

Nursing tops that disappear into your wardrobe

Nursing tops fail mothers in two predictable ways: they wear their function on the outside, and they're built from such basic jersey that they feel like sleepwear. Apéro's breastfeeding clothes are designed with a completely different approach . The feeding access is engineered into the seams. The fabrics are weightier - ribbed knits, waffle textures, poplin wovens, panelled jerseys. The cuts are considered: longline wraps, drop-shoulder box-cuts, fitted boatnecks, oversized panel tops. They read as tops, not as nursing equipment.

The collection covers every layering need across the year. Long-sleeve ribbed tops for transitional weather, knit jumpers and pullovers for winter, structured tanks and tees for warmer months, and event-ready wrap tops for moments that need more polish. Most pieces use one of four feeding access types: a wrap front that lifts cleanly, a zip closure hidden along a shoulder or side seam, layered panels where the outer piece lifts while the inner stays, or a stretchy scoop neck that pulls down without losing shape. The functionality is there when you need it and invisible the rest of the time.

Frequently asked questions

  • The best nursing tops have three things in common; invisible feeding access engineered into the seams, a fabric weight that holds shape, and a silhouette that suits the rest of your existing wardrobe. Wraps and side-zip tops are typically the most discreet. Avoid tops where the feeding mechanism is obvious from the outside, like horizontal panels or visible buttons. The best nursing tops should be ones you would buy even if you weren't breastfeeding. Quality of fabric matters more than the feeding mechanism itself once you find a style you like.

  • Nursing tops work through one of four main mechanisms. Wrap fronts overlap and lift apart for feeding. Side zips hidden in seams open to reveal a feeding panel. Layered or panelled tops have one layer that lifts while a second layer stays in place over your stomach. Scoop or ribbed necks stretch downward without losing shape. Each style suits different settings. Wraps suit cooler weather, scoop necks suit warmer. Most nursing tops use one of these four mechanisms regardless of brand or price point. We engineer them invisibly so the access doesn't compromise the styling.

  • es, you can wear regular tops while breastfeeding, but you will either need to lift the entire top up to feed (which exposes your stomach) or unbutton a shirt entirely (which is impractical in public). Regular tops also tend to bunch awkwardly when you lift them. A nursing-specific top lets you stay covered above and below the access point, which most mothers find significantly easier in public settings. Many mothers wear a mix of dedicated nursing tops and regular tops, using the nursing pieces when discretion matters most.

  • The number of nursing tops you need is typically four to six, which covers daily rotation comfortably. Aim for a mix: two long-sleeve options for cooler weather, two short-sleeve or tank options for warmer days, and one or two layering pieces. Add a structured wrap top for occasions where you need to look polished. This is enough variety to dress without thinking and to wash on a sensible schedule. More than that often means duplicating similar styles. Fewer than that usually means doing laundry too often or repeating outfits weekly.

  • es, nursing tops fit differently after pregnancy, particularly in the bust. Most mothers go up at least one bust size while feeding, which changes how a top sits. Our nursing tops are cut with some accommodation built in, but if you are between sizes, sizing up by one is usually the right call for the feeding months. After weaning, the same pieces will fit more closely. Look for adjustable elements like wraps and ties for the most forgiveness across sizes. Stretchy ribbed or jersey fabrics also adapt better to bust changes than structured wovens.