Breast imaging illustration
Dense Breasts

What Is Dense Breast Tissue?

Common, invisible to the touch, and important to understand - here's what your density category actually means.

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Quick Answer: Dense breast tissue is not a disease or abnormality - it simply means your breasts are made up of more glandular and fibrous tissue than fatty tissue. It is extremely common: about 40–50% of women who have mammograms have dense breasts. You cannot feel density yourself. As of September 10, 2024, all U.S. mammography facilities are required by federal law to tell you your breast density.

What Breast Tissue Is Made Of

Breast density is a measurement of how much glandular and fibrous tissue you have compared to fatty tissue, as seen on a mammogram. It is determined by a radiologist looking at your mammogram images and is completely separate from how your breasts feel or look.

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Glandular Tissue

The milk-producing glands (lobules) and the ducts that carry milk to the nipple. Appears white on mammogram.

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Fibrous Tissue

Supportive connective tissue that holds everything in place. Also appears white on mammogram.

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Fatty Tissue

Fat that fills the spaces between glandular and fibrous tissue. Appears dark on mammogram - easy to see through.

Breast cancer also appears white on a mammogram. This is why density matters so much for screening - more on that in the other topics in this series.

The Four Density Categories (BI-RADS)

Breast density is classified using the BI-RADS system (Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System), developed by the American College of Radiology. There are four categories:

CategoryLabelWhat It Looks LikeHow Common
A Almost entirely fatty Mostly dark / transparent ~10% of women
B Scattered fibroglandular density Mostly dark with a few white areas ~40% of women
C Heterogeneously dense Dense Mostly white - dense tissue throughout ~40% of women
D Extremely dense Dense Almost entirely white ~10% of women

Categories C and D are considered "dense breasts." This means approximately half of all women who get mammograms have dense breasts.

The New Federal Notification Requirement

Federal Law - Effective September 10, 2024

A new FDA rule under the Mammography Quality Standards Act (MQSA) requires every U.S. mammography facility to:

What Determines Your Density?

Breast density is largely determined by factors you cannot control:

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Age

Young women generally have denser breasts. Density naturally decreases as you get older and estrogen levels decline, particularly after menopause. However, density can remain high at any age.

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Genetics

Breast density is strongly hereditary - about 60% of the variation in breast density between women is explained by genetics. If your mother or sister has dense breasts, you are more likely to have them too.

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Hormonal Factors

Women taking hormone replacement therapy (HRT) - especially combined estrogen-progestogen therapy - tend to have higher breast density. Women who have had more pregnancies tend to have slightly lower density over time.

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Body Weight

Women with lower body weight tend to have higher breast density proportionally, because they have less fatty tissue throughout the breast.

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Tamoxifen and Similar Medications

Tamoxifen (used to prevent and treat estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer) can reduce breast density. Aromatase inhibitors also tend to reduce density.

When Should You Talk to Your Doctor?

You received a mammogram report and do not know your breast density category - ask your provider
Your report says you have dense breasts (Category C or D) - discuss with your doctor what this means for your personal screening plan
You have dense breasts combined with other risk factors (family history, prior high-risk biopsy, etc.) - a formal risk assessment is recommended
You have never had a mammogram and are 40 or older - density can only be determined through mammography

How Doctors Assess Your Density

1
Mammogram performed

Your standard screening or diagnostic mammogram is taken

2
Radiologist assessment

The radiologist evaluates the proportion of dense tissue to fatty tissue throughout both breasts and assigns a BI-RADS density category (A, B, C, or D)

3
Automated software

Many modern mammography systems now use validated automated software (such as Volpara or Quantra) to provide an objective, quantitative density measurement alongside the radiologist's assessment

4
Report and notification

Your density category is documented in the mammogram report, and you receive a notification letter - since September 2024, this is a federal requirement at all U.S. mammography facilities

5
Clinical context

Your radiologist and referring physician consider your density in the context of your overall health history and risk factors when determining next steps

Important: Breast density can vary between mammograms and between facilities, because assessment has a subjective component. It can also change over time - typically decreasing gradually with age and after menopause.

What Happens Next

Category A or B
Routine annual (or biennial) mammogram screening continues as scheduled. No supplemental imaging required solely on the basis of density.
Category C
You will be notified. Discuss with your doctor whether supplemental screening (ultrasound or MRI) is appropriate, particularly if you have other risk factors.
Category D
You will be notified. Supplemental screening is increasingly recommended; the ACR and NCCN now encourage discussing supplemental MRI starting at age 50 (or 40, depending on other risk factors).
Dense + other risk factors
Your doctor may recommend a formal risk assessment and/or referral to a high-risk breast program.

Frequently Asked Questions

My mammogram says I have dense breasts. Should I be alarmed?

No. Dense breasts are very common - about half of all women who have mammograms have them. Density is not a disease, a lump, or a sign that something is wrong right now. It is simply a description of your breast composition. What it does mean is that you and your doctor should have a conversation about your overall risk picture and whether supplemental screening makes sense for you.

Can I tell if I have dense breasts just by how they feel?

No. There is no relationship between how dense your breasts are and how they feel to the touch. Dense breasts do not feel harder, lumpier, or different in any way that you or a doctor could detect by physical exam. The only way to determine breast density is through a mammogram image reviewed by a radiologist. Many women are surprised to find they have dense breasts because they feel completely normal.

Will my breast density change over time?

Yes, it can. Breast density tends to decrease naturally as women get older, particularly after menopause. Stopping hormone replacement therapy can also reduce density. However, some women maintain higher density throughout their lives. Your density category may shift from one mammogram to the next, particularly if you change imaging facilities, since there is a subjective element to how radiologists assess density.

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This content is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with any concerns about your breast health.