What the science says, what tradition teaches
For millennia, tea has been woven into the rhythms of daily life across China, including during the childbearing years. Yet advice on drinking tea while pregnant or nursing has never been simple. In many Chinese households, a stillness descends when a pregnant woman reaches for a cup of strong tea — grandmothers from tea-growing regions like the Wuyi Mountains of Fujian whisper cautions about the baby’s sleep or the mother’s digestion. These folk traditions, while lacking today’s methodological rigour, reflect an ancient awareness that what a mother consumes matters — a thread that modern global health authorities have since woven into evidence-based limits.
Our topic cluster begins with two deep‑dive articles that survey the present landscape. “Tea during pregnancy — what the OB‑GYN literature says” distills official statements from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the UK National Health Service, and China’s own maternal‑fetal medicine guidelines published in 2019. Across these sources, a 200 mg caffeine ceiling becomes the common thread — roughly two modest cups of most Chinese green or black tea. But that number is a population‑level guideline, not a personal prescription; individual metabolism, habitual intake, and tea type all shape the real picture.
Tracking caffeine from cup to breast milk is the focus of our second article, “Caffeine during breastfeeding — what the lactation literature says.” Here the advice shifts gently: in late lactation the 200 mg limit holds, but in the first weeks after birth the biological clearance time can stretch to over 96 hours in a newborn, making even a single cup of strong pu‑erh a different prospect. Chinese postpartum customs — the “zuò yuè zi” confinement month — have long embedded these physiological truths without naming them, urging new mothers toward warming, caffeine‑free tisanes of jujube and ginger rather than their usual morning cup.
A third article in the works, “Chinese herbal tea wisdom in pregnancy,” will explore the classical materia medica view of tea’s thermal nature and its interaction with pregnancy gate‑systems from a traditional Chinese medicine perspective. Together, these long‑reads form a careful, non‑judgmental map for anyone seeking to reconcile a love of tea with the safety of their baby.
We invite you to explore the topic from multiple angles. At tea.school, our “tea and women’s health” module traces the same questions through the lens of tea science and culture. And over at thetea.app, you can sort our entire catalogue by caffeine content — useful when you want to stay well within the daily window. As always, the disclaimer that runs through every page of tea.doctor applies: we present what the literature says, never individual medical advice. Your doctor knows your body; our job is simply to hand you the research, well‑brewed and free of hype.