Medela vs Elvie Breast Pump UK 2026 — Which Is Better for You? | Modern Parenting
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Medela vs Elvie Breast Pump Swing Maxi vs Stride — Which Is Right for You?

An honest comparison of the Medela Swing Maxi and Elvie Stride — the UK’s two most popular double electric breast pumps. Covering suction power, expressing efficiency, wearability, noise, app connectivity, portability and which one suits each pumping situation.

Updated January 2026 2 pumps compared 14 min read Double electric

At a Glance

Medela Swing Maxi Double electric — corded with battery option From £249 • at Boots, Amazon, John Lewis
TypeTraditional double electric — tube and flange
PowerMains or rechargeable battery
WearableNo — requires holding or hands-free bra
Suction max250 mmHg (clinical grade)
NoiseAudible — not discreet
AppMyMedela app (optional pairing)
Parts countMultiple — tubes, flanges, valves, membranes
Elvie Stride Double wearable electric — in-bra From £249 • at Boots, Amazon, John Lewis
TypeWearable double electric — in-bra units
PowerRechargeable battery — no mains cable
WearableYes — sits inside standard nursing bra
Suction max~220 mmHg (strong for wearable)
NoiseVery quiet — largely discreet under clothing
AppElvie app — required for full control
Parts countFewer — simplified design

① Medela Swing Maxi — The Established Benchmark

The Medela Swing Maxi is the most widely used double electric breast pump in the UK and has held that position for over a decade. Its 2-Phase Expression technology — a faster stimulation phase followed by a slower expression phase that mimics a baby’s natural feeding rhythm — is Medela’s clinically studied approach to maximising milk output. The Swing Maxi’s maximum suction of 250 mmHg is at the top of what a hospital-grade pump delivers, and it consistently produces larger volumes per session than comparable wearable pumps in independent user comparisons.

The trade-off for this performance is form factor. The Swing Maxi requires a mains connection (or its rechargeable battery unit, sold separately at approximately £30), flanges connected by tubes, and either holding the flanges in place or using a hands-free pumping bra. It is not discreet — the motor is audible across a room and it is visibly a breast pump in use. For home expressing sessions where discretion is not required, none of this matters. For expressing at work, in a car, or in shared spaces, the Medela’s visibility and noise are genuine limitations.

② Elvie Stride — The Wearable Challenger

The Elvie Stride is the most popular wearable double electric breast pump in the UK — and at £249 it sits at the same price as the Medela Swing Maxi, making it a direct comparison rather than a premium upgrade. The Stride’s key proposition: a self-contained unit that fits inside a standard nursing bra, draws milk into a closed collection cup, operates quietly enough to use under clothing, and connects via Bluetooth to the Elvie app for session tracking and control.

The practical upside is genuinely significant for specific use cases. Expressing at a desk at work with the Stride looks, from the outside, like doing nothing different. The noise level is low enough to use while on a video call if the microphone is not immediately adjacent to the chest. Battery life per charge covers 2–3 typical expressing sessions. The Elvie app tracks volume, session duration and frequency — useful for mothers managing supply or building a freezer stash.

The honest limitation is suction efficiency. The Stride’s maximum suction (~220 mmHg) is meaningful but does not match the Medela’s clinical-grade 250 mmHg. For most mothers with a well-established supply, the difference is not material — the Stride will drain the breast effectively. For mothers managing low supply, building supply through power pumping, or pumping exclusively without a nursing baby to stimulate supply, the Medela’s stronger suction and proven clinical performance may produce better outcomes.

③ Head-to-Head Comparison

Category
Medela Swing Maxi
Elvie Stride
Price
From £249
From £249
Wearable
No — requires hands or hands-free bra
Yes — fits inside nursing braElvie wins
Suction power
250 mmHg — clinical gradeMedela wins
~220 mmHg — strong for wearable
Noise level
Audible — not discreet in shared spaces
Very quiet — discreet under clothingElvie wins
Expressing speed
Fast — typically 15–20 min per sessionMedela edges ahead
Slightly slower for most mothers
Milk volume
Typically higher output per sessionMedela wins
Adequate for most — lower for some
Power source
Mains (+ optional battery, extra cost)
Built-in rechargeable batteryElvie wins
App
Optional (MyMedela)
Required for full use (Elvie)Medela more flexible
Expressing at work
Requires private room, visible setup
Possible at desk or in meetingsElvie wins
Low supply / EP
Better choice — clinical suctionMedela wins
May be less effective for supply issues
Cleaning complexity
More parts — tubes, valves, membranes
Fewer parts — simpler to cleanElvie wins
Clinical evidence
Extensive — decades of clinical researchMedela wins
Growing — less established evidence base

④ Suction and Expressing Efficiency

The most practically important performance variable for a breast pump is how much milk it extracts per unit time — efficiency. Higher suction does not automatically mean higher output (suction pattern and rhythm also matter), but the Medela’s 2-Phase Expression and higher maximum suction consistently produce better output in independent user comparisons for mothers managing supply.

For mothers with a well-established supply who are expressing to maintain a freezer stash or cover one or two work sessions per day, both pumps produce adequate output. The difference becomes most significant for: exclusive pumpers (who rely entirely on the pump rather than a nursing baby to maintain supply), mothers with low supply who are power pumping to increase output, and mothers of premature babies in NICU where every millilitre is critical. In these situations, the Medela’s clinical performance advantage is material.

💡 Flange fit matters more than pump brand for output. The single most important variable in expressing efficiency — for either pump — is correct flange (breast shield) sizing. An incorrectly sized flange is the most common cause of poor output, discomfort during pumping, and nipple damage. Both Medela and Elvie offer multiple flange sizes; measure your nipple diameter and select accordingly. Many mothers need a size they would not have guessed — professional fitting guidance is available from a lactation consultant.

⑤ Noise, Discretion and Wearability

The Elvie Stride’s most transformative practical advantage is its ability to be used in contexts where the Medela Swing Maxi cannot. Pumping in an office, on a train, at a school pickup, or during a video meeting is feasible with the Stride in a way that simply is not possible with the Medela. For mothers returning to work who want to continue breastfeeding, this discretion difference is often the deciding factor — it removes the requirement for a private room and an obvious setup, and allows expressing to continue in a working environment without making it visible to colleagues.

The noise comparison: the Medela Swing Maxi produces a rhythmic mechanical sound that is audible at 3–4 metres and immediately identifiable as a breast pump. The Elvie Stride produces a quiet hum that is largely masked by clothing and inaudible in any environment with background noise. Neither is silent — but the practical difference in public or workplace settings is substantial.

⑥ Who Should Choose Which

💨 Medela Swing Maxi suits you if…
You are exclusively pumping or managing low supply — maximum efficiency matters
You pump primarily at home where noise and visibility are not concerns
You want the most clinically proven option with the longest evidence base
Your baby is premature or in NICU — clinical pump performance is critical
You prefer not to rely on an app and smartphone for pump control
🧃 Elvie Stride suits you if…
You are returning to work and want to pump discreetly at a desk
You have an established supply and are pumping for a freezer stash or occasional bottle
Discretion and portability are primary requirements
You want hands-free pumping without a separate hands-free bra
You travel frequently and want an always-ready battery-powered option
Our verdict

Medela for power. Elvie for freedom. They solve different problems at the same price — the right one depends entirely on your pumping situation.

Both pumps are £249. Both are double electric. Both are the right choice — for completely different mothers. The Medela Swing Maxi is the better choice if expressing efficiency is the primary requirement: for exclusive pumpers, mothers managing supply, or NICU mothers, the Medela’s clinical suction advantage is real and meaningful. The Elvie Stride is the better choice if discretion and wearability are the primary requirements: for mothers returning to work who want to continue breastfeeding without a dedicated pumping room, the Stride’s ability to be used under clothing at a desk changes what is practically possible.

If you have an established supply and are returning to a standard office environment — Elvie Stride. If you are exclusively pumping, managing low supply, or pumping primarily at home — Medela Swing Maxi. See our full breast pump guide for the broader market comparison including the Medela Freestyle and Elvie Pump.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Elvie Stride as powerful as the Medela Swing Maxi?+
Not quite. The Medela Swing Maxi reaches 250 mmHg maximum suction versus approximately 220 mmHg for the Elvie Stride. For most mothers with an established supply, this difference does not significantly affect output — the Stride will drain the breast effectively. For mothers managing low supply, power pumping to increase supply, or exclusively pumping without a nursing baby, the Medela’s higher suction and clinically proven 2-Phase Expression pattern typically produces better output.
Can I use the Elvie Stride without the app?+
Basic operation is possible without the app — you can start and stop the pump and adjust intensity using the buttons on the unit itself. However, the Elvie app provides significantly more control: choosing between expression modes, setting precise intensity levels, and tracking session data. The app is free and available on iOS and Android. It requires Bluetooth connectivity to the pump. If your phone is incompatible with the app or you prefer not to use it, the Medela’s physical control panel is easier to operate independently of any smartphone.
How long does the Elvie Stride battery last?+
Elvie rates the Stride at approximately 3 hours of pumping per charge — equivalent to 2–3 typical expressing sessions. Charging time is approximately 2 hours via USB-C. For most return-to-work scenarios (one or two sessions per working day), the battery covers the requirement without needing to charge at the office. For exclusive pumpers doing 8–12 sessions per day, the battery needs recharging between sessions.
Can I use Medela parts with the Elvie Stride or vice versa?+
No — Medela and Elvie parts are not cross-compatible. Flanges, collection cups and accessories are specific to each brand’s pump system. If you are switching between pumps or considering one as a backup for the other, you will need brand-specific accessories for each. Both brands offer a range of flange sizes — your size requirement may differ slightly between the two as the flange geometries are different.
Comparison based on editorial research as of January 2026. Prices correct at publication. Affiliate links: some links earn a small commission. Full disclosure →