That nappy you just opened — the one that made you do a double-take — is almost certainly fine. Baby poop changes a lot in the early weeks, and the range of "completely fine" is much wider than most of us expect. Here's a calm guide to what you'll see, plus the small handful of colours that genuinely warrant a phone call.
The first few days: meconium
Your baby's very first poos are meconium — thick, sticky and greenish-black, a bit like tar. It's made of everything they swallowed in the womb, and it can be surprisingly hard to wipe off. This is exactly what should happen, and passing it in the first 24–48 hours is a good sign that things are working.
Over the next 2–4 days, as your milk comes in or formula gets going, the stools transition: meconium gives way to greener, looser "changing" stools, then to the softer milk stools of an established feeder.
Milk stools: the normal range
Once feeding is established, "normal" covers a lot of ground. Colour and texture shift with each feed, and none of the variations below are a worry on their own:
- Yellow — mustard, gold or pale yellow
- Green — sage through to darker green
- Tan or light brown
- Seedy, curdy, smooth, runny or pasty in texture
| Feature | What's typical |
|---|---|
| Colour | Yellow, green, tan, light brown |
| Texture | Soft, seedy, runny or pasty |
| Frequency | From several a day to one every few days |
| Smell | Mild and sweetish, or slightly stronger |
Frequency varies enormously. Many young babies poo with most feeds; others — especially older breastfed babies — can go several days without one and be perfectly content. What matters more is that your baby is feeding well, has plenty of wet nappies, and the poo stays soft when it arrives.
Breast vs formula
| Breastfed | Formula-fed | |
|---|---|---|
| Colour | Mustard-yellow, sometimes green | Tan, yellow or light brown |
| Texture | Soft, runny, often seedy | Firmer, paste-like |
| Smell | Mild, slightly sweet | Stronger |
| Frequency | Frequent early on; can space out later | Usually more regular, can be firmer |
Both patterns are healthy. Combination-fed babies sit somewhere in between, and you may notice poo change a little when you switch or introduce a new formula — that's expected.
What's normal vs see-a-doctor
Most colour changes are just diet and timing. But three colours are worth a call, because they can point to something that needs checking:
A few reassuring notes: small amounts of green are normal and not a sign of illness; red-ish poo can sometimes come from beetroot or certain medicines rather than blood; and a few streaks of blood on hard poo can come from a tiny tear or, in breastfed babies, from a mother's cracked nipple. Still, it's always reasonable to check rather than guess.
Also get advice if you notice:
- Very hard, dry, pellet-like poo or signs your baby is straining and uncomfortable (possible constipation)
- Sudden watery, frequent stools, especially with fewer wet nappies, a dry mouth or fewer tears — these can be signs of dehydration
When to reach out
You know your baby best. Trust that instinct. Call your GP, child health nurse or doctor if a colour worries you, if poo becomes very hard or very watery, if there's blood, or if your baby seems unwell, unsettled or is feeding poorly. Guidance is broadly consistent across Raising Children Network, the Australian Breastfeeding Association, the AAP (HealthyChildren.org) and WHO, though exact wording varies by region — your local child health service is always the best first port of call.
This guide is general information, not medical advice, and can't diagnose anything. When something doesn't feel right, a quick chat with a health professional is never an overreaction.