Returning to work. Probably the most common reason parents start combo feeding. Nurse in the morning before leaving, send Sprout bottles to daycare (or have your caregiver prepare them), pump during the workday to maintain supply, nurse when you are home in the evening and overnight.
Low milk supply. When supply is not keeping pace with baby's needs, Sprout fills the gap while you continue breastfeeding for the volume you can produce. Often the difference between "not enough breast milk" and "I had to stop breastfeeding entirely."
Growth spurts. Babies hit growth spurts at predictable points (around 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months) where they want more milk than your supply can match. A few extra ounces of Sprout during these stretches can take pressure off — and your supply usually catches up within a few days.
Multiples (twins, triplets). Producing enough milk for more than one baby is genuinely difficult. Combo feeding with Sprout is often a necessary part of feeding multiples.
Mental health and sleep. Sleep deprivation is one of the most underrated factors in postpartum mental health. Combo feeding lets a partner take overnight Sprout feeds while the breastfeeding parent gets longer sleep stretches.
Adoption, surrogacy, or non-lactating parents. Sprout serves as a complete nutrition source while breast milk (donor or limited produced milk) is offered as available.
Transitioning to formula. When you are ready to stop breastfeeding, combo feeding gives you a gradual off-ramp. Replace one breastfeeding session at a time with Sprout, over weeks or months, allowing your supply to gradually decrease without engorgement or mastitis.