HMOs in Baby Formula: What They Are and Why They Matter


By: Suzanne Renee' - June 25, 2026 - 10 Minute Read

HMOs in Baby Formula: What They Are and Why They Matter | The Milky Box

If you have spent any time researching baby formula lately, you have probably run into the acronym "HMO" — usually presented as the latest must-have ingredient that brings formula closer to breast milk than ever before. Some brands market it heavily. Others quietly include similar compounds without the buzzword. And a lot of the marketing blurs an important line between what is actually an HMO and what is a prebiotic that behaves like one.


This guide cuts through the noise. We will explain what HMOs actually are, why they matter for your baby's gut and immune development, the critical difference between synthetic HMOs and naturally occurring ones, and how the formulas at The Milky Box — including goat milk options like Jovieand plant-based options like Sprout Organic — approach gut health. As always, talk to your pediatrician before making formula decisions, and remember that breast milk remains the gold standard.

What Are HMOs?

What Are HMOs? | The Milky Box


HMO stands for Human Milk Oligosaccharide. These are complex sugar molecules (carbohydrates) found naturally in human breast milk. After lactose and fat, HMOs are the third most abundant solid component of breast milk — more abundant than protein.


Breast milk contains more than 200 different types of HMOs, and each mother's HMO profile is unique, varying based on genetics, stage of lactation, and other factors. The most abundant single HMO in most mothers' milk is called 2'-fucosyllactose, usually abbreviated 2'-FL.


Here is the fascinating part: babies cannot actually digest HMO. These complex sugars pass through the baby's digestive system largely intact. So why would breast milk dedicate so much energy to producing a component the baby cannot even break down for calories?


Because HMOs are not there to feed the baby — they are there to feed the baby's gut bacteria, and to act as a defense system. This is what makes them so interesting to formula scientists, and why they have become one of the most talked-about ingredients in infant nutrition.


Why HMOs Matter for Babies

Why HMOs Matter for Babies | The Milky Box


HMOs serve several important functions in a baby's developing body, supported by a growing body of research:


They feed beneficial gut bacteria. HMOs act as a prebiotic — food for the "good" bacteria in your baby's gut, particularly Bifidobacterium. A baby's gut microbiome is being established in the first months of life, and HMOs help promote the growth of beneficial bacteria while crowding out harmful species.


They block pathogens. This is one of the most remarkable functions. Many viruses and harmful bacteria must attach to the cells lining the gut in order to cause infection. HMOs act as "decoys" — they resemble the cell surfaces that pathogens try to latch onto, so harmful microbes bind to the HMO instead and get flushed out of the body before they can cause disease. Researchers call this an "anti-adhesive" effect.


They support immune development. Through their effects on gut bacteria and the gut lining, HMOs play a role in training and developing the infant immune system during a critical developmental window.


They support the gut barrier. Some HMOs help protect and strengthen the cells lining the intestine, supporting a healthy gut barrier.


The research on HMOs is genuinely promising, though it is worth noting that most clinical studies are still relatively limited, and scientists continue to call for more trials. The compounds clearly matter — the open questions are about exactly how much benefit formula-added versions provide compared to breast milk.

HMOs vs Prebiotics: The Key Difference

HMOs vs Prebiotics: The Key Difference | The Milky Box


This is where most formula marketing gets confusing, so let us be precise.


HMOs are a specific type of compound found in breast milk. True HMOs (like 2'-FL) have a particular molecular structure.


Prebiotics are a broader category. Prebiotics are any non-digestible fibers that feed beneficial gut bacteria. HMOs are one kind of prebiotic, but not all prebiotics are HMOs.


The two most common prebiotics added to infant formula are GOS (galacto-oligosaccharides) and FOS (fructo-oligosaccharides). These are NOT HMOs. They are prebiotic fibers that mimic some of the functions of HMOs — particularly the gut-bacteria-feeding function — but they are structurally different molecules.


So when a formula says it contains "prebiotics that work like the ones in breast milk," that usually means GOS and/or FOS — beneficial, well-researched, and widely used, but not the same thing as actual HMOs. When a formula says it contains "HMOs," that should mean it contains the actual oligosaccharide compounds found in breast milk (either synthetic or naturally occurring).


Both approaches support gut health. But they are not identical, and it is worth knowing which one you are actually getting. GOS has decades of safe use in European formula and is well-established for supporting digestion and stool consistency — it is a genuinely valuable ingredient, just a different one from HMOs.

Synthetic vs Naturally Occurring HMOs

Synthetic vs Naturally Occurring HMOs | The Milky Box


Among formulas that do contain actual HMOs, there is a second important distinction: where the HMO comes from.


Synthetic (biotech-produced) HMOs. Currently, only two HMOs can be produced at industrial scale: 2'-FL and LNnT (lacto-N-neotetraose). These are made through a fermentation process and added to formula as fortifiers. They are structurally identical to the HMOs in breast milk, but they do not come from breast milk — they are manufactured. Both have been approved as safe by the US FDA (GRAS status) and the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). This is the approach most US formulas (like Enfamil and Similac) take when they advertise "HMOs."


Naturally occurring HMOs. Some formulas contain HMOs that arise naturally from the milk itself rather than being added synthetically. The most notable example is 3'-galactosyllactose (3'-GL), which forms naturally from the lactose in whole milk during production. Kendamilis notable here — it is one of the few formulas (and markets itself as the first organic formula) to contain naturally occurring HMOs rather than synthetic ones, including in its goat milk range.


Neither approach is "wrong." Synthetic 2'-FL is the most-researched formula HMO and is structurally identical to what is in breast milk. Naturally occurring HMOs appeal to parents who prefer ingredients that arise from the milk rather than being added in a lab. Both have merit, and the science on which is superior is not settled.


HMOs and Goat Milk Formula

HMOs and Goat Milk Formula | The Milky Box


Here is something many parents do not realize: goat milk naturally contains oligosaccharides that are structurally similar to the HMOs in human breast milk — and in significantly higher amounts than cow milk.


Goat milk contains up to 10 times more oligosaccharides than cow milk. These naturally occurring goat milk oligosaccharides share structural similarities with several human milk oligosaccharides, which is one of the reasons goat milk formula is often considered closer to breast milk in this respect than standard cow milk formula.


This is part of what makes Jovie Goat and other goat milk formulas appealing for gut health:


Jovie Goat uses full-fat goat milk as its primary ingredient, which preserves the naturally occurring oligosaccharides present in goat milk. On top of this natural oligosaccharide content, Jovie adds GOS prebiotics to every stage for additional gut support. The combination means Jovie delivers both the naturally occurring goat milk oligosaccharides and supplemental prebiotic fiber. For the full breakdown, see our Jovie Goat Milk Formula: The Ultimate Guide.


Kendamil Goat takes it a step further by being the only goat formula globally to include naturally occurring HMOs (3'-GL) alongside the goat milk's natural oligosaccharides and added GOS. For a head-to-head, see our Jovie Goat vs Kendamil Goat comparison.


To be precise: goat milk's natural oligosaccharides are similar to HMOs, not identical. But this natural similarity, combined with added prebiotics, gives goat milk formulas a genuine gut-health advantage worth understanding. For more on goat milk's benefits, see our best goat milk formula guide.

Prebiotics in Plant-Based Formula

Prebiotics in Plant-Based Formula | The Milky Box


What about plant-based formula, which contains no animal milk at all? Plant-based formulas cannot contain milk-derived HMOs or goat milk oligosaccharides — but they can and do support gut health through plant-derived prebiotics and probiotics.


Sprout Organic takes a thoughtful approach to gut health:

  • Inulin prebiotics — a plant-derived prebiotic fiber (commonly from chicory root) that feeds beneficial gut bacteria, serving a similar gut-nourishing function to GOS

  • Plant-based probiotics — Sprout includes a Lactobacillus acidophilus probiotic, adding live beneficial bacteria directly rather than only feeding existing bacteria

This combination of prebiotic (food for good bacteria) and probiotic (the good bacteria themselves) supports the developing gut microbiome through a plant-based pathway. For families who need or want a dairy-free option, this means choosing plant-based formula does not mean sacrificing gut-health support. For the full Sprout breakdown, read our 2026 Parent's Guide to Sprout Organic.


It is worth being honest here: plant-based prebiotics like inulin are not HMOs, and they are not identical to the oligosaccharides in breast milk or goat milk. But they are well-researched, effective prebiotic fibers that genuinely support gut health — and combined with a probiotic, they give Sprout a comprehensive gut-health approach within a dairy-free formula.

How TMB Formulas Support Gut Health

Different formulas at The Milky Box take different approaches to gut health. Here is the honest landscape:


Formulas with naturally occurring HMOs | The Milky Box
  • Formulas with naturally occurring HMOs: Kendamil (cow and goat lines) contains naturally occurring 3'-GL HMOs plus GOS.

Formulas with prebiotics + probiotics (Combiotic approach) | The Milky Box
  • Formulas with prebiotics + probiotics (Combiotic approach): HiPP uses its signature Combiotic system — GOS prebiotics plus a clinically researched probiotic (L. fermentum derived from breast milk research).

Formulas with natural goat milk oligosaccharides + GOS | The Milky Box
  • Formulas with natural goat milk oligosaccharides + GOS: Jovie Goat and Holle Goat benefit from goat milk's naturally high oligosaccharide content, with Jovie adding GOS.

Plant-based prebiotics + probiotics | The Milky Box
  • Plant-based prebiotics + probiotics: Sprout Organic uses inulin prebiotics plus a plant-based probiotic.

  • Hydrolyzed plant-based: Bébé M supports gut health within a hydrolyzed rice protein formula designed for allergy management.

The takeaway: nearly every quality formula supports gut health in some way, but the mechanisms differ. HMOs (synthetic or natural), goat milk oligosaccharides, GOS/FOS prebiotics, and probiotics are all tools toward the same goal — a healthy infant gut microbiome. The "best" approach depends on your baby's needs and your priorities. Compare options on our Baby Formula Comparison Chart.

What the Research Actually Shows

What the Research Actually Shows, What is well-established | The Milky Box


It is worth being clear-eyed about the state of the evidence, because the marketing often outpaces the science.


What is well-established:

  • HMOs are genuinely important components of breast milk with real biological functions

  • Synthetic 2'-FL and LNnT are safe and well-tolerated when added to formula, and produce a gut bacteria profile closer to breastfed infants

  • GOS and FOS prebiotics have decades of safe use and support digestion and stool consistency

  • Goat milk's higher oligosaccharide content is a real, measurable difference from cow milk

What the Research Actually Shows,What is still being researched | The Milky Box


What is still being researched:

  • The precise degree of clinical benefit that formula-added HMOs provide compared to formula without them

  • Long-term outcomes — most studies are relatively short-term

  • How synthetic single HMOs compare to the 200+ HMOs in actual breast milk (formula can only add one or two; breast milk has hundreds)


The honest summary: HMOs and prebiotics in formula are beneficial and bring formula incrementally closer to breast milk. But no formula — no matter how many HMOs it contains — fully replicates the complexity of breast milk. If you are formula feeding, choosing a formula with good gut-health support (HMOs, oligosaccharides, or quality prebiotics) is a reasonable priority, but you do not need to stress about chasing the formula with the most HMOs. For broader context on choosing formula, see our best organic baby formula guide.

Do You Need HMOs in Your Formula?

Do You Need HMOs in Your Formula? | The Milky Box


The practical question every parent asks. Here is a balanced answer:


HMOs are a nice-to-have, not a must-have. Plenty of healthy babies have been raised on formulas without added HMOs. GOS/FOS prebiotics, goat milk's natural oligosaccharides, and probiotics all support gut health effectively. HMOs are an enhancement, not a requirement for a formula to be nutritionally complete and supportive of healthy development.


Consider HMOs (or strong prebiotic support) a priority if:

  • Your baby has had digestive issues and you want maximum gut-health support

  • You are looking for the formula that comes closest to breast milk composition

  • Your baby was born preterm or has immune considerations (discuss with your pediatrician)


Do not over-prioritize HMOs if:

  • Your baby is thriving on their current formula

  • You are choosing a formula for other specific reasons (allergy management, dietary values, ingredient avoidance) — these often matter more for your specific baby than HMO content


The bottom line: gut health support matters, and HMOs are one good way to provide it. But goat milk oligosaccharides, quality prebiotics, and probiotics are also legitimate, well-researched approaches. Choose the formula that fits your baby's overall needs — gut-health support is one factor among several, not the only one. And as always, your pediatrician can help you weigh what matters most for your specific situation.


Written by Suzanne Renee',

Infant Nutrition Expert

Suzanne Renee' is an accomplished professional with extensive expertise in the area of infant nutrition, dedicated to promoting the health and wellbeing of children. She started this journey as a foster parent.


Suzanne has emerged as a strong proponent of the European baby formula and has become a full-time writer on the subject.

In her free time, she enjoys camping, hiking, and going to church.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does HMO stand for in baby formula?

HMO stands for Human Milk Oligosaccharide — complex sugar molecules naturally found in breast milk that support gut health and immune development. They are the third most abundant solid component of breast milk after lactose and fat.

Are HMOs in formula the same as in breast milk?

Synthetic HMOs like 2'-FL are structurally identical to those in breast milk, but they are biotech-produced rather than from breast milk. Also, formula can only contain one or two HMO types, while breast milk contains more than 200. So formula HMOs are "real" HMOs, but they do not replicate the full complexity of breast milk.

Do Jovie and Sprout contain HMOs?

This requires a precise answer. Jovie Goat contains naturally occurring goat milk oligosaccharides (structurally similar to HMOs, in higher amounts than cow milk) plus added GOS prebiotics — but not synthetic HMOs. Sprout, being plant-based, contains plant-derived inulin prebiotics and a probiotic rather than milk-derived HMOs. Both support gut health, just through different mechanisms than added HMOs. Kendamil is the TMB goat option that contains naturally occurring HMOs (3'-GL).

Is GOS the same as an HMO?

No. GOS (galacto-oligosaccharides) is a prebiotic fiber that mimics some functions of HMOs — primarily feeding beneficial gut bacteria — but it is a structurally different molecule. HMOs are a specific type of compound; GOS is a different, well-researched prebiotic.

Which formula has the most HMOs?

Among formulas, those with synthetic 2'-FL (often US brands) advertise specific HMO content. Among TMB's European and Australian formulas, Kendamil contains naturally occurring HMOs. But "most HMOs" is not necessarily "best" — goat milk oligosaccharides, GOS/FOS, and probiotics are all valid gut-health approaches, and your baby's overall needs matter more than maximizing one ingredient.

Are HMOs necessary for my baby?

No. HMOs are beneficial but not required for a formula to be complete and supportive of healthy development. Many healthy babies thrive on formulas with GOS/FOS prebiotics, goat milk oligosaccharides, or probiotics instead. HMOs are an enhancement, not a necessity.

Where can I buy these formulas in the US?

Through The Milky Box with all-inclusive pricing — import duties, customs, and tracked shipping covered. See our shipping policy for delivery details.

Disclaimer:


Please be aware that this information is based on general trends in babies, and it is not medical advice. Your doctor should be your first source of information and advice when considering any changes to your child’s formula and when choosing your child’s formula. Always consult your pediatrician before making any decisions about your child’s diet or if you notice any changes in your child.


Breastfeeding is the best nutrition for your baby because breast milk provides your child with all the essential nutrients they need for growth and development. Please consult your pediatrician if your child requires supplemental feeding.


Suzanne Renee' is an accomplished professional with extensive expertise in the area of infant nutrition, dedicated to promoting the health and wellbeing of children. She started this journey as a foster parent. Suzanne has emerged as a strong proponent of the European baby formula and has become a full time writer of the subject. In her free time, she enjoys camping, hiking and going to church.

Leave a Comment:

Comments will be approved before showing up.

Name:

Email:

Comment:

Read Next: