This deserves its own section because it is the single most important distinction between these two categories — and the one parents most often get wrong.
Goat milk formula is NOT safe for babies with confirmed cow's milk protein allergy. This surprises many parents, who assume that "different animal" means "safe alternative." It does not. Goat milk proteins are structurally similar enough to cow milk proteins that cross-reactivity is common — studies and clinical guidance consistently show that most babies with CMPA will also react to goat milk. This applies to all goat milk formulas, including Jovie, Holle Goat, and HiPP Goat.
Plant-based formula sidesteps this entirely. Because Sprout contains zero animal milk protein — no cow, no goat, no casein, no whey — there is nothing for a milk-protein-allergic immune system to react to. For mild to moderate CMPA, plant-based formula like Sprout is often an appropriate option under pediatric guidance.
For severe or confirmed CMPA, your pediatrician may recommend a hydrolyzed formula like Bébé M (which uses hydrolyzed rice protein for even lower allergenic potential) or a prescription extensively hydrolyzed or amino acid formula. Read our Bébé M Anti-Reflux guide for more.
The bottom line: if your baby has a true cow's milk protein allergy, goat milk is not the answer — plant-based or hydrolyzed formula is. If your baby just has a mild sensitivity, goat milk may work beautifully. The distinction between allergy and sensitivity is something only your pediatrician can confirm.