A 30C bra size means your underbust measures approximately 25–26 inches (64–66 cm) and your bust measures 28–29 inches (71–74 cm) — a 3-inch difference that defines the C cup. The number anchors to your ribcage; the letter is a ratio, not a fixed volume.
What Is a 30C Bra Size?
Breaking down the number and the letter — separately.
Most people wearing a 30C have either been told the size doesn’t exist, or have spent years squeezed into a 32B that gaps at the cups and rides up at the back. The 30C is a precise, well-defined measurement — and the persistent difficulty in finding it on the rack is a retail problem, not a body problem.
To understand a 30C, you must separate the two components entirely. The number 30 is your band size — it anchors the entire bra to your ribcage and is responsible for delivering the vast majority of lift and support. The letter C is your cup size — it represents a three-inch difference between your underbust and full bust measurement. It is a ratio, not a fixed volume, and it does not mean the same physical amount of tissue across every band size.
The volume in a 30C is identical to that of a 28D and a 32B — all three are sister sizes sharing the same cup capacity. Yet a 30C on a narrow, 25-inch ribcage looks noticeably fuller and more projected than that same cup letter on a wider frame. The letter C is relative; what it looks like is entirely dependent on the band it is paired with.
The single biggest source of 30C misfitting is the absence of 30-band bras in mainstream retail. Store fitters working with 32-band inventory routinely assign women to a 32B — a looser band, smaller cup — rather than acknowledge that the correct size simply isn’t in stock. If your 32B cups feel tight while the band is simultaneously loose, you are almost certainly a 30C.
30C Bra Measurements
The precise measurements that define this size — in both inches and centimetres.
Difference = C Cup (~3 in)
Wrap tape snugly around your bare ribcage where the band sits — perfectly level across your back. This is your band number. For a 30C, it should read 25–26 inches (64–66 cm).
Stand naturally and measure around the fullest part of your bust without compressing tissue. Keep the tape level. For a 30C, this reads 28–29 inches (71–74 cm).
Bust minus underbust = cup letter. A 3-inch (≈7.5 cm) difference = C cup. With a 30 band → you’re a 30C.
A new bra should feel secure on the loosest hook. Tighter hooks are reserved for when the elastic stretches over time — never start on the tightest setting.
What Does 30C Look Like?
Cup size tells you volume — not shape. Your breast shape changes how any size looks on your body.
The most misunderstood part of bra sizing is expecting one size to look identical on everyone. A 30C looks entirely different depending on your height, muscle mass, and natural breast root shape. Two people can share the exact same 28-inch bust measurement and look like they are wearing completely different sizes.
Victoria’s Secret Bombshell Push-Up Bra — Maximum Lift for 30C
- Adds up to 2 cup sizes of visible lift on an already full C cup
- Narrow 30-band keeps angled foam perfectly flush against the chest wall
- Creates dramatic cleavage with no side spillage or overflow
- Ideal for low-cut outfits where maximum projection and definition matter
Petite Frame
On a narrow, shorter torso, a 30C looks distinctly full and rounded. The smaller ribcage means the C cup volume takes up a proportionally larger share of the chest — prominent, projected, and naturally defined without any push-up needed.
Looks very fullAthletic Build
Broader shoulders and pectoral muscle mass spread the cup volume across a wider surface. The tissue distributes wider and can appear flatter despite correct measurements. Look for structured underwire styles that add forward projection.
Spreads widerWide-Set Breasts
Volume is spread across a wider base with a gap at the sternum. If you consistently find empty space at the center of plunge bras, your tissue is wide-set — seek a bra with a wider center gore that doesn’t force tissue inward artificially.
Gap at centerShallow Shape
Tissue covers more surface area but projects less forward. Molded foam cups tend to gap at the top because volume spreads like a plate rather than a bowl. Balconettes and seamed lace cups adapt much better to this shape.
Gapes at top of cupsYour cup size tells you volume, not shape. And your unique breast shape affects how a bra fits far more than the letter on the tag ever will. Two 30C bodies can look completely different — both are perfectly normal.
Is 30C Considered Large?
Whether 30C reads as “large” depends entirely on frame. On a narrow 25-inch ribcage, a C cup is noticeably full and projected. On a wider frame, the same volume spreads out and appears far more modest. Neither perception is wrong — they are both the result of how cup volume interacts with ribcage circumference.
Cup volume scales with band width. A 30C holds the exact same tissue volume as a 28D and a 32B — these are sister sizes. The same letter C on a 36 band holds considerably more physical volume than the C on your 30 band.
A 30C is a genuinely full cup on a narrow frame. It is not extreme, unusual, or disproportionate — it is simply what happens when C cup projection sits on a 25-inch ribcage rather than a 34-inch one.
30C Sister Sizes
Same cup volume — different band and letter combinations. Your lifeline when the band is off but the cups fit perfectly.
When the cups feel right but the band does not, sister sizing is the cleanest fix. You can calculate equivalent sizes instantly with the Sister Size Calculator, or read the full Sister Sizes Guide to understand why 28D and 32B can match 30C in cup volume.
Rule: Go up one band = go down one cup letter | Rule: Go down one band = go up one cup letter | Result: Cup volume stays identical
| Smaller Band (tighter) | Same Volume as 30C | Larger Band (looser) |
|---|---|---|
| 28D | 30C — You | 32B |
| 26E | 30C | 34A |
30C vs Other Sizes
Select a comparison to understand exactly how 30C differs from adjacent sizes.
If you are still stuck between nearby sizes, compare the broader patterns inside our Breast Size Comparison hub. It helps you see how band width, cup depth, and sister sizing change from one label to another.
- Same 30-inch band — same ribcage fit
- 3-inch cup difference — more depth and projection than 30B
- Noticeably fuller cup volume on the same narrow frame
- If 30C consistently gapes at top, try 30B instead
- Same 30-inch band anchors both
- Only 2-inch cup difference (B cup)
- Less tissue volume and shallower cup projection
- If 30B tissue spills over the top or sides, you are correctly in 30C
- 3-inch cup projection — full but contained volume
- Tissue fits without spillage at correct size
- If you try 30D, cups will have excess fabric and pool at top
- 4-inch cup difference — significantly more depth
- Larger cup volume on the same narrow 30-inch ribcage
- 30C spillage over cup top or armpit = try 30D
- Tighter band — better lift and structural support all day
- Slightly less cup volume than 32C
- Correct fit for a 25–26 inch ribcage
- 2 inches looser band — designed for a 27–28″ ribcage
- Same C letter but holds slightly more cup volume
- If 30C is tight in band only, don’t jump to 32C — try 30D first
- Fits a 25–26″ underbust with moderate band tension
- Identical cup volume to 28D — just a looser band
- If band rides up on 30C, move to 28D — same cup capacity
- Significantly tighter band — 23–24″ ribcage
- Sister size: exact same cup tissue volume as 30C
- Dropping to 28C instead would reduce cup volume — use 28D
Best Bra Styles for 30C
What actually works — and one style to skip entirely.
Warner’s Cloud 9 Wireless Bra — Soft Support Without Underwire
- Wire-free comfort — no pressure points on a narrow 30-inch ribcage
- Flexible cups accommodate 30C volume without gaping or overflow
- Gentle lift and natural shape for all-day daily wear
- Perfect for work-from-home, lounging, or low-impact activities
Seamless molded foam sits flush at this cup volume, giving a smooth rounded silhouette under fitted tops. No buckling, no empty pockets — a reliable everyday staple for 30C.
Highly effective for 30C. The C cup gives angled padding real tissue to work with, and the narrow 30 band keeps pads flush against the chest — producing striking projection without looking engineered.
Mechanically ideal for 30C tissue. The horizontal underwire lifts from below while the wide-set straps frame the chest beautifully — particularly effective for wide-set or lower-sitting tissue placement.
Works well with structured bralettes designed for C cup depth. Unstructured styles may lack the support to hold 30C volume in place — look for bralettes with internal shelf cups or light boning.
A 30-inch band with firm elastic provides solid support for C cup volume without underwire. Look for wireless styles with deeper cup construction — avoid flat or shallow wireless designs.
Full coverage cups are designed for heavy, pendulous tissue needing maximum containment. On 30C volume, the tall cups tend to create a boxy, flattened silhouette and empty fabric at the top rather than a natural shape.
Common Fit Problems with 30C
Identify what’s wrong — and what to actually do about it.
The band is too loose to anchor against your ribs. It migrates upward with movement and transfers all weight to shoulder straps — causing neck and shoulder pain and eliminating all structural support.
The cup is either too large or wrong for your breast shape. Shallow breast tissue placed in tall molded foam cups will always produce an air gap at the top. This is a shape mismatch — not necessarily a size error.
Straps are positioned too far apart for your skeletal shoulder width. Tightening doesn’t fix the root cause — it only creates pressure grooves and eventually pulls the band up in back.
The underwire is too wide for your breast root width. The wire must encapsulate all tissue and lie flush against the ribcage — anything wider will dig into breast tissue at the outer edge.
The gore is floating away from your sternum instead of sitting flush. This typically means cup volume is slightly insufficient, or the cup shape doesn’t match your tissue placement.
Overflow above the cup edge or near the armpit means the cups are too small for your volume. A band that is too loose can also push tissue upward and create apparent spillage that disappears with a correct-fitting band.
International Size Conversion
Ordering a European or Australian bra? Your size changes on the label — but your body doesn’t.
Shopping European lingerie? A 65C in France, Germany, or Poland equals your standard 30C. European sizing converts band measurements to centimetres — 30 inches becomes approximately 65 cm on their charts. The cup letter C remains consistent across most EU markets. Don’t let the number change lead you to order an incorrectly sized band.
Shopping by brand rather than label alone will save significant fitting-room frustration at this cup depth. Use the Brand Size Decoder and the Global Bra Size Converter to translate 30C accurately across different sizing systems and manufacturer fit patterns.
Frequently Asked Questions
The questions everyone actually searches — answered directly.
No. A 30C and a 32B are sister sizes — they hold the exact same volume of breast tissue in the cup. The structural difference is the band: 32B features a looser band designed for a 27–28 inch ribcage, while 30C fits a narrower 25–26 inch torso. Cup capacity is identical between them.
Yes — 28D is the direct sister size down from 30C. You maintain the exact same cup volume while gaining a much firmer, more supportive band. This is the ideal swap if your 30C band rides up your back or feels loose even on the tightest hook setting.
It is a genuine, common measurement for petite to average frames with a C cup projection — but it is severely underrepresented in mainstream retail. Countless women who measure as a 30C are incorrectly assigned a 32B by store fitters simply because the store doesn’t stock 30-band bras, not because 30C is an unusual size.
Excellent for push-ups. The C cup provides enough tissue volume for angled foam padding to work against, and the narrow 30 band keeps pads flush against the chest wall throughout the day. You get dramatic, sustained lift and visible cleavage without the bra looking disproportionate on a smaller frame.
It can. On a narrow 25-inch ribcage, a C cup is proportionally quite prominent — the same volume that looks modest on a 34-inch ribcage looks noticeably full on a 30 band. Whether this reads as “big” is entirely subjective and frame-dependent, but 30C is not an extreme size by any clinical measurement.
A 30C typically belongs to someone with a slim, petite, or lean-athletic frame — a ribcage measuring firmly around 25 to 26 inches and a C cup projection giving approximately 3 inches of cup depth. This size is seen on petite adults, slender teens transitioning to fuller cup sizes, and lean athletic builds with naturally projected breast tissue.
In most bralette and sports bra sizing charts, 30C translates to a Small or Small-Medium depending on the brand’s band tightness. Because the 30 band is narrow, some brands size it as an XS in the band while the cup depth requires a Small or Medium cup equivalent. Always check the brand’s specific measurement chart rather than relying on S/M/L labelling alone.
Confirm Your True Size
Measurements don’t lie — store fittings often do. Use two quick measurements to get your exact bra size in seconds. No guesswork, no frustration.
