Going back to work after maternity leave can result in panic, guilt, relief or some combination of all three feelings. And women who choose to continue breastfeeding need to carve out space and time to use a breast pump at work, which can be a potential logistical headache on top of an already emotional time.
Even those who don’t work in a traditional office environment agree. “Pumping at work sucks,” actress Hilary Duff recently wrote on Instagram. “I had zero down time and am usually pumping in a hair and make-up trailer while four hands work to get me ready for the next scene with lots of other people around,” she wrote, alongside a photo of her nursing 6-month-old daughter Banks.
And actress Rachel McAdams, wearing diamonds and Versace on set, famously posed last year for a photo during one of her pump breaks, posted by photographer Claire Rothstein.
While pumping at work has become more normalized in recent years (thanks in part due to social posts like Duff’s and McAdams’) many women still struggle to figure out the logistics and making it work.
Twenty-nine states have laws designed to protect breastfeeding mothers in the workplace, but only about 40 percent of women have a designated space to pump that is not a bathroom. Even when women do have proper spaces, they must fiercely protect that designated time from being usurped by work calls, meetings and chatty coworkers. And they need to somehow feel relaxed enough to actually produce milk.
Know Your Value spoke to a number of working mothers who have pumped in offices, on airplanes, in supply closets, under desks and during meetings to gather the best advice for making pumping at work a positive experience for you, your baby and your employer.
Know the law
Though many employers are legally obligated to provide time and space for nursing mothers, they don’t always comply with federal mandates. “Know the state laws before you broach your employer,” said Claire McGhee, a private practice pediatrician in Houston. McGhee was initially told that her pumping options were a single-occupant patient bathroom or a windowless supply room with no ventilation or seating.
McGhee smartly researched the law and referenced it to her male office manager. “Because I looked it up,” McGhee said, “I knew pumping in the bathroom wasn’t a legal option. They were very willing to work with me when they knew that.” They ended up agreeing on using an empty patient room to pump—not a perfect solution, but a workable one. McGhee was glad she fought for a better option. “There’s a balance between being a mom and being a working provider. When it comes down to it, being a mom wins,” she said.
Set yourself up for success
“Preparing in advance makes pumping less awkward,” said Rachel Rodgers, a business strategy coach for female entrepreneurs based in Greensboro, NC. A mother of four, Rodgers has been “pumping all over America this past year” to nourish her 10-month-old son, and she has even pumped in big meeting rooms at conferences with mostly men in attendance.
Whether you are pumping in public or in private, Rodgers suggested having a plan:
- Wear clothes that make it easy to hook up your pump
- Try a hands-free pump and/or a nursing cover
- Sit next to other women—especially moms—who may help you or protect your personal space
- Practice pumping in a place with low stakes—don’t make the office or a conference the first time you pump outside your home
- If you’re flying:
1. Arrive early because you often have to be “ready to do battle” to get your milk through the security line
2. Check online to see if your airport has a “mom pod” or lactation room
3. Consider upgrading to an airport lounge, which often has cleaner facilities
Rodgers’s dedication to breastfeed outweighed her discomfort—and other people’s discomfort, too. She said, “People are just going to have to be uncomfortable because I have to get this milk out. I can’t always do something that’s convenient for everyone else …”
Find language that makes you comfortable
Not everyone feels quite as open about pumping as Rodgers. Amanda Scott, a marketing manager at a medical device company from Fort Worth, Texas, had been exclusively pumping before she returned to work, and she had supportive management and coworkers. However, Scott said, “I feared the perception that I am less productive or not as engaged in my job because of the 30 to 60 minutes I need to spend in the mother’s room away from my desk.” She found herself stuck in back-to-back meetings and delayed pumping so frequently that her supply dropped; she spent hundreds of dollars on lactation supplements to build it back up again.









