The Truth About Plus Size Bras
If you've spent years thinking you're a 40DD and nothing fits properly — you're almost certainly not a 40DD. The most common mistake in plus-size bra fitting is wearing a band that's too large and a cup that's far too small, resulting in inadequate support, shoulder strain, and the belief that comfort and fit simply aren't possible above a certain size.
What most shops get wrong
Many mainstream retailers and even department store fitters add 4–5 inches to the underbust measurement to calculate band size — a method from the 1940s when bra fabric had no stretch. Modern bra elastic doesn't need this addition. The result is a band that's far too big, which then requires an undersized cup to "fit."
What actually works
Measure your underbust snugly with no additions. Measure your bust loosely. The difference between the two is your cup size — each inch is one cup letter. Then use sister sizing to fine-tune the fit between band comfort and cup volume.
How to Measure
The method is identical to any bra sizing — what changes is knowing which brands actually stock your size, and how to identify a truly well-fitting bra when you try it on.
Band measurement
Wrap a soft measuring tape snugly (not tight — you should be able to breathe comfortably) around your ribcage directly under your bust. Round to the nearest even number. This number is your band size. Do not add inches.
Bust measurement
Measure loosely around the fullest part of your chest, keeping the tape parallel to the floor. Stand straight, arms at your sides. The tape should sit across the nipple line without pulling. Write down this number.
Cup Sizes Explained
US and UK cup size letters diverge from DD onwards — which causes constant confusion. Here is the full ladder from D through to N, with both US and UK equivalents.
| Difference (inches) | US Cup | UK Cup | EU Cup | AU Cup |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4" | D | D | D | D |
| 5" | DD | DD | E | DD |
| 6" | DDD / F | E | F | E |
| 7" | DDDD / G | F | G | F |
| 8" | H | FF | H | FF |
| 9" | I | G | I | G |
| 10" | J | GG | J | GG |
| 11" | K | H | K | H |
| 12" | L | HH | L | HH |
| 13" | M | J | M | J |
| 14" | N | JJ | N | JJ |
| 15" | O | K | — | K |
Common Fit Problems
These are the most frequent issues for larger band and cup sizes — and why each happens.
Shoulder and back pain
A persistent myth is that large breasts always cause back pain. In reality, an ill-fitting bra causes most of it. When the band is too loose, the straps take the weight of the breasts — and that weight goes through the shoulders and upper back. A well-fitted band carries that weight around the ribcage instead.
Underwire digging into the side
When the cup is too small, breast tissue overflows the cup and sits against the underwire at the side seam. The wire is no longer running through empty space — it's pressing against breast tissue. This is extremely common in sizes above DD and almost always means the cup is 2–3 sizes too small.
Four-breast effect (double-boob)
Breast tissue spills over the top of the cup, creating a visible ridge. The cup is too small. This happens frequently when women are steered toward smaller cup letters because the larger ones seem intimidating — but a 38G is not a large cup, it is a medium volume for a 38 band.
Bra riding up constantly
The band is too large. Even if it feels tight at the clasp, a band that rides up isn't gripping correctly — the elastic has either stretched or was too large to begin with. The back of the bra should sit at the same level as the front all day.
Straps falling off shoulders
In larger sizes this usually means the band is doing no work — so the straps are being over-tightened to compensate and still sliding off. The root issue is nearly always a band that's too large or too worn out to stay anchored.
Nothing in my size at shops
Standard retail rarely stocks above a 42DD or 44DDD. Sizes above this require specialist construction — stronger underwire gauge, wider band elastic, more reinforced cup seaming — that mass-market brands don't invest in. This is not a you problem; it is a retail problem.
What to Look For When Shopping
Not all bras in large sizes are built equally. These features matter significantly at larger band and cup sizes.
Underwire gauge
Heavier-gauge underwire is essential above DD — thin wire will flex, poke, and eventually break under the weight of heavier breast tissue. Specialist brands use thicker, wider-diameter wire designed for the load. You can test this by pressing the underwire — it should feel firm, not flexible.
Number of hooks
Standard bras have 2 or 3 hooks. For band sizes 38 and above, look for 3 or 4 hooks — the extra hooks distribute the load more evenly across the band, preventing the fabric from rolling or warping. A wider band with more hooks provides better stability.
Seamed cups
Moulded (seamless) cups are made from a single piece of foam — they impose a shape on the breast rather than adapting to it. Seamed cups (with visible stitching across the cup) are built from panels that conform to real breast shapes. Read more in our bra styles guide. For most larger cup sizes, seamed cups provide better containment and more natural shape.
Strap width
Straps should be at least 1.5–2cm wide for D cup and above. Thin straps concentrate the weight over a small area of the shoulder, causing indentation and nerve pain. Wider, padded straps distribute weight and are far more comfortable for all-day wear in larger sizes.
Side boning or side support panels
Side panels that contain boning or reinforced fabric prevent the side of the bra from rolling outward — a common issue in larger cup sizes where the underwire needs anchoring. Look for "side support" or "power mesh side panels" in product descriptions.
Band fabric
A wider, firmer band makes a dramatic difference. Look for double-layer band fabric or "power mesh" bands. Avoid stretch lace or single-layer satin bands in larger sizes — these lose their shape quickly and provide poor support from the start.
Best Brands for Plus Sizes
These brands are specifically designed for larger band and cup combinations — also see our full brand guide for mainstream sizing charts. — not scaled-up versions of small sizes.
Elomi
The benchmark for full-figure bra engineering. Excellent underwire quality, seamed cups, wide straps. Strong range of styles including wire-free options. Widely available internationally.
Shop Elomi →Panache
Premium UK brand with exceptional fit engineering. Strong on balconette and full-cup styles. Panache Sport is their sports line — excellent for D–J cup. Available at Nordstrom, ASOS, and direct.
Shop Panache →Goddess
US-based brand specialising in fuller figures. Very wide size range, good value. Strong on minimisers and wire-free styles for everyday wear. Available at most US department stores and Amazon.
Shop Goddess →Bravissimo
UK retailer and own-label brand specifically for D–L cup. Excellent fitting expertise. Their own-label bras are very good quality at mid-range prices. Ships internationally.
Shop Bravissimo →Curvy Kate
Known for stylish, fashion-forward designs in larger cups. Good balconette and plunge options. Excellent for women who want attractive bras, not just functional ones. Active swimwear line too.
Shop Curvy Kate →Torrid
US plus-size specialist. Excellent for very large bands (48–54). More fashion-forward than Goddess, more affordable than Elomi. Good T-shirt bra options. Available online and in US stores.
Shop Torrid →Freya
Excellent balconette and underwired full-cup styles. Good for fuller-busted women who want attractive everyday bras. Freya Active (sports) is very strong for D–K cup. Wide availability globally.
Shop Freya →Lane Bryant
US-focused, widely accessible in physical stores. Good value, fashionable designs, reliable fit for bands 38–46. Less engineering depth than Elomi or Panache but good for everyday affordable options.
Shop Lane Bryant →Recommended Styles
| Situation | Best style | Brands to try |
|---|---|---|
| Everyday comfort, D–H cup | Full-cup seamed underwired | Elomi, Panache, Freya |
| Everyday comfort, H cup+ | Full-cup seamed, wide band, 4 hooks | Elomi, Goddess, Panache |
| Wire-free comfort | Structured wire-free with seamed cups | Elomi, Panache Non-Wired |
| Running / high impact | High-impact encapsulation sports bra | Shock Absorber, Panache Sport, Freya Active |
| Formal / minimising | Minimiser full-cup | Elomi, Goddess, Wacoal |
| Occasion / eveningwear | Balconette or plunge in extended sizes | Curvy Kate, Freya, Panache |
| Very large band (48+) | Full-cup, 4-hook, power mesh band | Elomi, Torrid, Goddess |
Frequently Asked Questions
Find your true size — in every system
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