Save Infant Lives While You Drive

Provide 15 feedings to fragile babies and drive awareness for The Milk Bank by purchasing your Saving Infant Lives specialty Indiana license plate today.

Help more babies see their first birthday by getting
The Milk Bank license plate for your car, truck, or motorcycle.

Drive awareness for the lifesaving benefits of human donor milk by adding The Milk Bank specialty license plate to your vehicle(s) today. Each plate sold provides The Milk Bank with $25, which funds 15 feedings for critically ill babies in the NICU.

You can switch to The Milk Bank’s plate at any time, even if your license plate is not up for renewal. The Indiana BMV will prorate your fee.

Step 1

Go to The Milk Bank’s specialty plate design. Click the See More Plates button until you get to the T section.

Step 2

Click the blue Renew Your Plates Online button.

Step 3

Sign in and complete your purchase. Be sure the select the Saving Infant Lives plate from the Special Organizations plate section.

Save Lives While Your Drive

The Milk Bank is thrilled to be one of the new specialty group recognition license plates approved by the Interim Study Committee on Roads and Transportation.    

Freedom Kolb, CEO of The Milk Bank, shares, “This is such an incredible investment in infant health. Not only will each license plate provide up to 15 feedings for the tiniest Hoosiers, but the visibility will encourage more milk donation across the state. It is such a meaningful, high impact investment to support medically vulnerable babies and their families.” 

The Milk Bank Specialty License Plate FAQ

  Save babies while you drive

Use your car for good! Support 15 feedings for critically ill babies and drive awareness for The Milk Bank.

Why use donor milk?

Pasteurized Donor Human Milk has been scientifically proven to benefit babies. There are a variety of reasons a family might need to use pasteurized donor milk for short or long-term needs. Some of the more common reasons include:

  • Prematurity
  • Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC)
  • Failure to thrive
  • Pre- and post-operative nutrition
  • Maternal illness or absence
  • Adoption
  • Low or developing milk supply
  • Treatment for infectious diseases
  • Immunodeficiency disorders
  • Formula intolerance
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