Breast size varies widely and is shaped mostly by biology—not by anything to do with the vagina. The idea that breast size is linked to vaginal anatomy or sexual activity is a myth with no scientific basis.
Genetics is the biggest driver of breast size, followed by hormones like estrogen and progesterone during puberty, cycles, and pregnancy. Body fat also matters because breasts contain fatty tissue, so size can change with weight gain or loss.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding often enlarge breasts as glandular tissue grows; some women return to baseline afterward, others don’t. Hormonal meds (e.g., birth control, HRT) can cause temporary swelling, and rare conditions like macromastia/gigantomastia lead to excessive growth.
While estrogen influences both breast development and vaginal health, these are separate systems. Breast size doesn’t reflect fertility, sexual activity, or vaginal traits—women’s bodies are diverse, and that diversity is normal.