
The five bra fit problems most women have, and how to fix them
About 80% of women are wearing the wrong bra size. That's not a marketing line, it's a number that comes up in fit study after fit study. Most of us got measured once, in our 20s, in a department store that wanted to sell us the size they had in stock. Bodies change. Bras change. The size you bought four years ago is probably not the size you need today.
Here are the five problems we hear about most, and what's actually causing them.
The band rides up your back
Your band should sit horizontal, parallel to the floor. If it's hiking up your shoulder blades, your band is too loose, not too tight. The band does about 80% of the work holding the bra in place. The straps are decoration with a job description. If the band rides up, you need a smaller band size and a larger cup to compensate. So if you're a 36C and the band rides up, try a 34D. The cup volume stays the same, the band gets the support it needs.
The straps fall off your shoulders
Same problem, different symptom. Loose band, tight straps, gravity wins. People tighten the straps to compensate, which leaves grooves on the shoulder by lunchtime. Fix the band first, the straps will sit naturally.
If the band fits well and the straps still slip, your shoulders may simply slope (a lot of people's do). Look for bras with set-in straps that come from closer to the center of the back, not bras with straps anchored at the outer edges.
The cups gap at the top
You're wearing a cup that's too big for you, or a style that's the wrong shape for your bust. A demi cup will gap on someone with shallower breasts that sit lower. A full cup will gap on someone with fuller breasts that sit higher. Same body, two different bras, two different fits.
Try a balcony or a plunge before you assume your size is wrong. The shape of the cup matters more than the size letter.
You spill out at the side or the front
The cup is too small. The classic mistake is sizing the band down without sizing the cup up. A 34C and a 36B are different bras even though the math looks similar. If the band fits but you're spilling, go up a cup, not down a band.
If the spillage is at the side under the armpit (the "side boob" issue), look for a bra with side support panels. Not all brands build them in. The side panels keep tissue forward where it should be.
"It feels fine but I look wrong"
Your breasts should sit halfway between your shoulders and your elbows. If they're sitting lower than that, the bra has lost its lift. This usually means the straps are too long, the band has stretched out, or the underwire is broken or rotated.
Bras have a working life of about 6 to 9 months if you wear them every other day. Beyond that, the elastic in the band has stretched too far to give you the lift you bought it for. Buying three bras and rotating them lasts longer than buying one and wearing it constantly.
The cheat sheet
| What you see | What's wrong | What to try |
|---|---|---|
| Band rides up | Band too loose | Smaller band, bigger cup |
| Straps slip | Band too loose, or sloped shoulders | Fix band first; set-in straps |
| Cups gap | Wrong cup shape, not size | Try balcony, demi, plunge |
| Spillage | Cup too small | Bigger cup, same band |
| Sits too low | Worn out elastic | Replace; rotate three at a time |
Top-rated bras
Shop all →If none of this is helping, our size guide has a measuring walkthrough with a tape measure and a mirror, plus a fit converter for international sizes. Twenty minutes will save you a lot of frustrated mornings.
Keep reading
More from the journal
FabricApr 30, 2026
The case for spending more on loungewear
You wear your loungewear more than anything else in your closet. Count the hours. Mornings before work, evenings after, weekends, sick days, the long stretches
Occasion DressingApr 30, 2026
A no-shame guide to wearing shapewear under everything
Shapewear has had a PR problem For about a decade, the conversation around shapewear has been wrapped up in body shame, secrecy, and slightly weird Hollywood ru
Fit GuideApr 30, 2026
How to find your shapewear size without a fitting room
Why most size charts get it wrong You measure your waist, you check the chart, and the piece still doesn't fit. The chart is not lying, but it's giving you one











