Best Nursing Bras Australia 2026 — Complete Buyer's Guide

New mum wearing ChicCross seamless cross-front nursing bra in nude — best nursing bras Australia 2026 guide

Last updated: May 2026 · 8-minute read

It's 3am. You're feeding on the sofa, again, and the bra you're wearing — the one that fit perfectly during your second trimester — is digging into your ribs, leaving red marks on your skin, and won't quite unclip with one hand. You promise yourself you'll buy a proper nursing bra tomorrow. And then tomorrow comes, and you wonder: which one?

If that scene rings a bell, you're in the right place. This is a complete guide to choosing the best nursing bra Australia 2026 — what to look for, how to size yourself at home, when to actually buy them, and which styles work best for breastfeeding mums-to-be and new mums. By the end, you'll know exactly what to put in your basket.


What a nursing bra actually is (and why a regular bra won't cut it)

A nursing bra is built around one design problem: how to give a feeding mum easy access to her breast without taking the whole bra off. Most nursing bras solve this in one of three ways:

  • Clip-down cups — a small clasp at the strap drops the cup down, baring just one side at a time.
  • Cross-front / pull-aside — the cup is built to be pulled to the side with one hand, no clips at all.
  • Stretch-pull-down — softer bras where the fabric is stretchy enough to be pulled down without unclipping anything.

Beyond access, nursing bras differ from regular bras in three important ways. The band is usually wider, the cup is usually softer, and most nursing bras are wire-free, because the consensus (backed by the Australian Breastfeeding Association and most lactation organisations) is that underwire can put pressure on milk ducts and contribute to blocked ducts or mastitis if the fit is off.

Wearing a regular bra postnatally is fine for short stretches if it's all you have, but you'll feel the difference within a day.

The 5 types of nursing bra (and which one's right for you)

There's no single "best" nursing bra. There are five distinct styles. Most mums end up with two or three styles by the end of the postnatal year.

Australian mum wearing ChicPush push-up wireless nursing bra in nude — wire-free molded cup shape support

1. Seamless wire-free — the everyday workhorse

If you only own one nursing bra, make it a seamless wire-free style. The cup is soft and unmoulded, the band is wide, and the construction is smooth enough to disappear under a jumper or t-shirt. The ChicNurse™ Seamless Clip-Down Nursing Bra is our take on this category, and our ChicSoft™ Wire-Free Nursing Bra is the gentler-on-sensitive-skin alternative.

2. Cotton lace — for the days you want to feel like yourself

Postnatal dressing is mostly about comfort, but there are days when you want a bra that doesn't look like medical equipment. The ChicLace™ Pure Cotton Lace Nursing Bra is built for this brief.

3. Push-up wireless — for shape support without underwire

Push-up nursing bras have a moulded cup that provides supportive lift without an underwire. The ChicPush™ Push-Up Wireless Nursing Bra fits this category.

4. Cross-front / pull-aside — the no-clips option

If clips frustrate you, a cross-front nursing bra pulls aside with no fastening at all. The ChicCross™ Seamless Nursing Bra uses this design.

5. Sleep & lounge bras

Sleep bras are the softest category. Our ChicFeed™ Seamless Wireless Nursing Bra is soft enough that many mums wear it as both daytime and night-time.

When to buy nursing bras (and how many you actually need)

Here's the sequence that works for most Australian mums:

  • First trimester: usually too early.
  • Second trimester (weeks 16–24): this is when most mums buy their first nursing bra.
  • Third trimester (week 36+): consider sizing up. Look at our I'm Pregnant collection.
  • Postnatal weeks 6–8: this is when most mums invest in their "real" nursing bras. The I'm Postnatal collection covers this stage.

How many? Three to five bras is realistic.

Sizing your nursing bra at home (Australian sizing explained)

Australian bra sizing is broadly aligned with UK sizing — band measurements in inches (10/12/14/16 AU = 32/34/36/38 UK) and cup measurements as letters (A, B, C, D, DD, E, F, G). Many imported brands use UK sizing labels.

Your pre-pregnancy bra size is your starting point, but expect to go one to two cup sizes up by the time your milk has come in and settled.

Measuring yourself at home

  1. Band: measure snugly around your ribcage directly under your bust.
  2. Bust: measure around the fullest part, tape parallel to the floor.
  3. Cup: subtract band from bust. 1 inch = A, 2 = B, 3 = C, 4 = D, 5 = DD, 6 = E.

If you're between sizes during pregnancy, size up. The Australian Breastfeeding Association has more in-depth fitting advice.

What to look for: 5 quality markers in a nursing bra

  1. A wide, adjustable band — at least 1.5 inches wide.
  2. Soft seamless construction — eliminates rubbing on sensitive postnatal skin.
  3. One-handed clip access — non-negotiable.
  4. Breathable fabric — cotton blends or moisture-wicking fabrics for our warmer climate.
  5. Wire-free — most lactation guidance favours wire-free.

Top nursing bras for Australian mums (2026)

Australian mum wearing ChicCross seamless cross-front nursing bra in nude — no-clips pull-aside design

Bra Best for Key features
ChicNurse™ Best all-rounder, everyday wear Seamless wire-free, clip-down, four-way stretch
ChicSoft™ Best for sensitive postnatal skin Wire-free, ultra-soft seamless cups, clip-down
ChicPush™ Best for shape and supportive lift Wire-free push-up, moulded cup, 10 colours
ChicLace™ Best for special occasions Pure cotton lining, soft lace overlay, clip-down
ChicFeed™ Best for sleep and lounge wear Ultra-soft seamless, daytime and overnight wear

Most mums begin with one ChicNurse™ and one ChicSoft™.

Frequently asked questions

When should I buy my first nursing bra during pregnancy?

Most Australian mums buy their first nursing bra in the second trimester, around weeks 16 to 24.

How many nursing bras do I need?

Three to five is realistic for full-time breastfeeding.

Is it safe to wear an underwire nursing bra?

The Australian Breastfeeding Association recommends wire-free nursing bras, especially in early postnatal weeks.

How often should I wash nursing bras?

Every two to three wears, or after any leak. Gentle cycle, cold or warm water, no tumble dryer.

Ready to choose?

Browse the ChicMama nursing bra collection — Australian delivery in 7–14 business days.

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