Hormonely - Women's Hormonal Health Reviews

Boon Trove Silicone Breast Pump Review – Hands-Free Manual Milk Collector

By haunh··5 min read·
4.2
Boon Trove Silicone Manual Breast Pump Set - Hands Free Breast Milk Collector - Includes Polyester Travel Pouch - Breastfeeding Essentials - 2 Count

Boon Trove Silicone Manual Breast Pump Set - Hands Free Breast Milk Collector - Includes Polyester Travel Pouch - Breastfeeding Essentials - 2 Count

Boon

  • Hands Free Pumping: Easily collect up to 3 ounces of milk with this manual breast pump that uses passive suction to naturally extract milk when you are lactating
  • Anytime Use: The Trove wearable breast pump milk collector comfortably collects letdown while breastfeeding, pumping, or any time you’re feeling full throughout the day
  • Discreet Design: The Trove is a wearable breast pump that fits smoothly and comfortably under your bra and quietly collects milk; no worry that it’ll fall or get knocked off
  • Easy Pour: The Boon Trove stands on its own on your tabletop and lets you pour your milk into a breast milk storage bag or baby bottle for easy transfer without any spills

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Lightweight silicone sits comfortably under a nursing bra without adding pressure
  • Passive suction means zero batteries and completely silent operation
  • Self-standing design pours cleanly into storage bags — no dribbles on the counter
  • Top-rack dishwasher safe; takes under a minute to hand-wash between uses
  • Set of two keeps one in the diaper bag while the other is being cleaned

Cons

  • Passive suction limits output — not a replacement for electric pumping sessions
  • Capacity capped at 3 oz per collector; heavy letdown may overflow the small chamber
  • Requires a properly fitted bra to stay secure; loose bands cause slipping
  • Silicone can retain residual odors after several uses if not thoroughly dried

Quick Verdict

The Boon Trove breast pump is a quiet, battery-free silicone collector that earns its place in a breastfeeding kit — not as a primary pump, but as a clever catch-all for letdown and those moments when you're engorged and nowhere near your electric unit. I wore it through a full week of feeds and it never fell off, never made a sound, and never left a bruise. If you need to drain a full breast between sessions, look elsewhere. If you want something lightweight that slips under your bra and collects what would otherwise be lost milk, this is exactly that.

Score: 4.2 out of 5

Boon Trove Silicone Manual Breast Pump Set - Hands Free Breast Milk Collector - Includes Polyester Travel Pouch - Breastfeeding Essentials - 2 Count

What Is the Boon Trove Breast Pump?

The Boon Trove is a wearable, manual silicone breast pump — sometimes called a milk collector or letdown catcher. Unlike electric pumps, it has no motor, no batteries, and no tubing. Instead, the soft silicone bell creates passive suction when you press it against your breast and settle it under your nursing bra. It then sits there, silently gathering milk as your body releases it naturally.

It comes as a two-count set, each collector holding up to 3 ounces of milk. The flanges are flexible, the body is firm enough to stand upright on a countertop, and the wide mouth makes pouring into storage bags straightforward. Boon, the brand behind the Trove, is best known in the baby-gear space for their plant-themed feeding products and dish-drying racks — so they've been in the business of making parenting life a little less clunky for years.

Key Features

  • Passive suction design — no batteries, no motor, no noise; silicone creates seal when pressed in place
  • 3 oz capacity per collector — enough for a standard letdown or partial expression
  • Self-standing base — won't tip over on a nightstand or bathroom counter when you set it down
  • Wide pour spout — transfers to breast milk storage bags or bottles without drips
  • 100% food-grade silicone — BPA-free, PVC-free, soft against sensitive breast tissue
  • Top-rack dishwasher safe — easy clean-up between uses, especially when washing by hand feels like one thing too many
  • Discreet under-bra fit — low profile, stays put during light movement, silent during use

Hands-On Review

I first tried the Boon Trove on a Tuesday morning, already three weeks into a routine that involved an electric pump every four hours. The idea was simple: wear it on the opposite side while nursing my daughter on the left. By the time she finished, I'd collected just over an ounce from the right side — milk that, without the Trove, would have soaked into a breast pad and been lost.

That small victory felt bigger than it sounds. Breast milk is liquid gold, and watching an extra ounce add up across a day — especially during those marathon cluster-feeding evenings — shifted my attitude from "nice gadget" to "actually useful." By the end of the first week I had a small freezer stash building from nothing more than the milk I'd been leaking into pads.

Boon Trove Silicone Manual Breast Pump Set - Hands Free Breast Milk Collector - Includes Polyester Travel Pouch - Breastfeeding Essentials - 2 Count

What surprised me was how natural it felt. There's no lever to squeeze, no rhythm to maintain. You press it on, tuck it under your bra, and go. I wore it while making coffee, answering emails, and once while half-asleep on the couch at 6 a.m. It never shifted, never fell off. The silicone edge seals against the breast without feeling like a suction cup — there's no painful tug when you pull it away.

The pour, honestly, is where the design earns its keep. The base is weighted enough to stand upright on my cluttered nightstand, and the opening is wide enough that I can tip it directly into a Lansinoh storage bag without溅 anything. I've used other manual pumps where you have to awkwardly angle the whole unit to get milk out; this one just pours.

Boon Trove Silicone Manual Breast Pump Set - Hands Free Breast Milk Collector - Includes Polyester Travel Pouch - Breastfeeding Essentials - 2 Count

That said, I'll be honest: this is not an efficient empty. If I'm exclusively pumping, I reach for my electric Spectra. The Trove works best when you're already nursing or have a few hours between expressions — it's a collector, not a breast emptier. On days when I was engorged and needed real relief, the 3-ounce max capacity filled fast and I had to empty it mid-session or risk overflow. That's a real limitation if you're a high-output producer.

Who Should Buy It?

  • The working-from-home nursing parent — catches letdown on one side while feeding on the other, building a stash without extra pumping sessions
  • Travel-ready parents — slips into a diaper bag with zero bulk, no power adapter needed, discreet enough to use in a parked car or quiet office
  • Anyone managing oversupply or forceful letdown — collects what would otherwise soak through pads during letdown reflexes
  • Parents who hate their electric pump — if the motor sound stresses you out, the silent Trove is a welcome break between sessions

Skip this if you're exclusively pumping and need to empty both breasts fully each session — the Trove's passive suction and 3 oz capacity simply can't keep up with that demand. It's also not ideal if your nursing bra doesn't offer enough support; without a snug fit, the collector won't seal properly.

Alternatives Worth Considering

  • Lansinoh Silicone Breast Milk Collector — nearly identical concept, also passive suction with a 4 oz capacity. Boon's advantage is the self-standing base and slightly wider pour spout, but Lansinoh's is widely available and often priced a touch lower.
  • Haakaa Gen 1 Silicone Pump — the original manual silicone collector, with a cult following and a 4 oz capacity. It's less discreet under clothing (the bell shape is bulkier) but has a proven track record and many parents swear by it for the same letdown-catching use case.
  • Medela Swing Flex Electric Breast Pump — if you need a reliable electric unit for daily emptying, Medela's compact Swing is a portable workhorse. It's not hands-free on its own but pairs well with a hands-free bra for on-the-go pumping.

FAQ

It's a manual milk collector. It uses passive suction created by the silicone shape itself — no batteries, no squeezing mechanism, and no motor.

Final Verdict

The Boon Trove breast pump won't replace your electric unit, but that's not what it's trying to do. It's a lightweight, silent, on-body collector that catches what would otherwise be wasted — letdown during feeds, overflow between sessions, or those small amounts that make a meaningful difference when you're trying to build a freezer stash. The silicone is comfortable, the self-standing base is genuinely convenient, and the two-pack means you're never caught without a clean one.

It's best suited for nursing parents who want a low-friction way to save extra milk without adding a full pumping session to their day. If that describes your situation, the Trove is worth having in your kit.