If you are looking for the best mom groups in Fresno, you are after the same thing every new parent here wants: a few people who get it, close to home. Fresno is a sprawling, car-dependent metro of roughly a million people set in the middle of the agricultural San Joaquin Valley, about three hours from both Los Angeles and San Francisco, with no nearby big city to borrow a support network from. Between summers full of triple-digit heat days that keep parents and babies inside and the physical distance between newer north Fresno and the older downtown core, a new mom here can feel a whole city away from anyone in the same season of life. The good news is that Fresno has a strong network of mom groups, new-parent meetups, and community support. Below are the seven we would point a friend to first in 2026.
For most Fresno parents, The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter) is the best all-around mom group, while Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center is another standout. If you want something free, Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center is an easy place to start. Many of the best groups are free or low cost, so the real question is less about money and more about which neighborhood and vibe fit you.
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How Fresno Parents Are Really Doing in 2026
Before the list, some context for why finding your people matters so much. New parenthood is lonelier than most of us expect, and the research backs that up. In a nationwide survey from The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, about two thirds of parents said the demands of parenthood can feel isolating and lonely, and mothers reported it most acutely.1 Other studies put roughly one in three new mothers in the lonely camp, compared with fewer than one in five adults overall.2 A good mom group is not a nice-to-have. For a lot of Fresno parents, it is the difference between surviving the first year and enjoying parts of it. You can read more in our State of Baby Sleep report.
The Best Mom Groups in Fresno at a Glance
- The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter): Moms who want real friendships and a built-in social life.
- Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center: New and expecting parents who want free, clinically backed help.
- FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis: Moms who want to rebuild strength and meet moms at once.
- My Time Recovery Postpartum Support Group: Moms struggling with postpartum depression, anxiety, or identity.
- La Leche League of Fresno Clovis: Breastfeeding and chestfeeding parents wanting mother-to-mother support.
- MOMS Club of Fresno and Clovis: First-time and stay-at-home moms wanting a structured local network.
- Betteroo: Best for the sleep side of new parenthood. Personalized baby-sleep support for when community is not quite enough.
The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter)
Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center
FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis
My Time Recovery Postpartum Support Group
La Leche League of Fresno Clovis
MOMS Club of Fresno and Clovis
| Group | Area | Cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter) | Fresno metro-wide, with events across north Fresno, the River Park area, and Clovis | Paid membership plus some free social events | Moms who want real friendships and a built-in social life |
| Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center | Downtown Fresno at Community Regional Medical Center, serving the whole metro | Free | New and expecting parents who want free, clinically backed help |
| FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis | North Fresno, the River Park area, and Clovis | Paid classes, free monthly moms’ night out and playgroups | Moms who want to rebuild strength and meet moms at once |
| My Time Recovery Postpartum Support Group | North Fresno on East Shaw Avenue, plus Zoom | Free | Moms struggling with postpartum depression, anxiety, or identity |
| La Leche League of Fresno Clovis | Fresno and Clovis for in-person meetings, plus a virtual group | Free | Breastfeeding and chestfeeding parents wanting mother-to-mother support |
| MOMS Club of Fresno and Clovis | Neighborhood chapters: Fresno North, Fresno Central, and Clovis-Sanger | ~25 to 30 dollars/year | First-time and stay-at-home moms wanting a structured local network |
How We Picked the Best Fresno Mom Groups
We started with a pool of more than 20 Fresno mom groups, parent collectives, and new-parent programs surfaced from local directories, parenting publications, and neighborhood recommendations. From there we narrowed to groups that met four criteria: they are active in 2026 with regular meetups or events, they are genuinely welcoming to newcomers, they are transparent about cost and how to join, and they have a track record of parents vouching for them. We were not paid to include any group on this list, and there are no affiliate arrangements.
1. The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter): Best Overall
The Posh Mama Club launched its Fresno chapter in the summer of 2023 with a tagline about putting the glitz and glam back into motherhood, and it has quickly become the most visible new-mom community in the Valley. Led locally by president Priscilla Gross, a mother of four, the chapter has grown to around 60 members and holds two to three events a month. This is not a playdate club, it is a social life for the mom herself, and past gatherings have ranged from yoga sessions to financial-literacy workshops to business networking.
What sets it apart is how deliberately it welcomes everyone, from stay-at-home moms and career moms to moms-to-be, foster and step moms, and empty nesters. The club also raises money for Valley nonprofits, so the friendships come with a sense of purpose. It has been featured by ABC30 Fresno and the local press, which is a good sign of momentum. If you want to actually make adult friends after having a baby in Fresno, this is the first place to look.
Best for: Moms who want real friendships and a built-in social life.
2. Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center: Best Free
The Mother’s Resource Center is run by Community Regional Medical Center, the region’s largest hospital and its comprehensive birth center, and it offers free education, breastfeeding support, and classes for expectant and new parents. Crucially, it serves any local parent, whether you delivered there or somewhere else, which makes it the closest thing Fresno has to a public, hospital-based new-parent hub. Staff can help with lactation questions and the everyday puzzles of early parenting, all at no cost.
This is the practical anchor of any Fresno parent’s support list, because it is free, credible, and open to everyone. In the disorienting first weeks, having a place downtown where a professional can answer your feeding and newborn questions takes real weight off. Use it as your clinical backstop and pair it with one of the friendship-focused groups on this list for the social side.
Best for: New and expecting parents who want free, clinically backed help.
3. FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis: Fitness
The FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis franchise brings the national brand’s signature programs to the Valley, including Stroller Strides, a 60-minute stroller-based class of strength, cardio, and core work with songs to keep the babies happy. There is also Strides 360 and the 8-week mom-only Body Well program with nutrition guidance and accountability. Locally it has had 50 or more moms registered across its prenatal and postnatal programs, and it added a meeting spot near River Park.
The friendliest detail is that the free monthly Moms’ Night Out events and Village playgroups are open to non-members, so you can test the community before paying for classes. That lowers the barrier to just showing up and seeing if these are your people. Because the franchise’s own booking subdomain has been unstable, the national FIT4MOM locator is the reliable way in. If moving your body and making mom friends sound good together, this is your north Fresno and Clovis option.
Best for: Moms who want to rebuild strength and meet moms at once.
4. My Time Recovery Postpartum Support Group: Therapist-Led
My Time Recovery runs a free postpartum support group for expectant and new mothers facing depression and anxiety, and it is led by three licensed female clinicians. The group meets Wednesday evenings from 5:30 to 7:00 pm and you can join in person in north Fresno or on Zoom, whichever is easier with a newborn. Sessions cover what to expect through pregnancy and childbirth along with identity, self-care, boundaries, communication, and concrete coping skills.
This is the strongest local therapist-led option in Fresno, and the fact that it is free removes the most common barrier to getting help. If the early months bring a low that will not lift, anxiety that spirals, or the disorienting sense that you have lost yourself, this group meets you there with professional guidance and peers who understand. Postpartum Support International’s free national groups and helpline at 1-833-943-5746 are a good backup between meetings.
Best for: Moms struggling with postpartum depression, anxiety, or identity.
5. La Leche League of Fresno Clovis: La Leche League
La Leche League of Fresno Clovis is the local chapter of La Leche League International, and it offers two monthly support groups, one in person and one virtual, always free and facilitated by accredited LLL Leaders. One meeting is held from 7 to 9 pm on the first Tuesday of the month, and babies, nursing toddlers, and expectant parents are all welcome. The leaders are also reachable any time by phone, text, or email, so help is not limited to meeting nights.
Where a hospital lactation consultant is great for a clinical fix, La Leche League shines at the ongoing, mother-to-mother side of feeding, the kind of steady encouragement that gets you through cluster feeding and self-doubt. Sitting in a room with parents a few weeks or months ahead of you is reassuring in a way a pamphlet never is. If breastfeeding is central to your plan, put this free monthly meeting on your calendar early.
Best for: Breastfeeding and chestfeeding parents wanting mother-to-mother support.
6. MOMS Club of Fresno and Clovis: First-Time Moms
MOMS Club is an international nonprofit built specifically for mothers at home with their children, including work-from-home and part-time moms, and Fresno has multiple neighborhood chapters so you meet parents who live close by. Between the Fresno North, Fresno Central, and Clovis-Sanger chapters, you get monthly meetings, weekly park days, casual get-togethers, family parties, playgroups, babysitting co-ops, and service projects. Annual dues are low, roughly 25 to 30 dollars, which keeps it accessible.
The neighborhood structure is the whole point, because it means your support network is a short drive rather than across the sprawling metro. Chapters are reached by email or phone, and the national organization lives at momsclub.org. If you are a first-time or stay-at-home mom who wants a dependable weekly rhythm with other families nearby, pick the chapter closest to you and go to a park day.
Best for: First-time and stay-at-home moms wanting a structured local network.
7. Betteroo: Best for the Sleep Side of New Parenthood
A quick note of transparency: Betteroo is us. We are including ourselves last and clearly labeled, because a mom group and a sleep plan solve two different halves of the same problem. The community half is what every group above does so well. The other half is the exhaustion underneath it, and that is the part we built Betteroo for.
The single most common thing that pulls Fresno parents into a group in the first place is sleep, or the lack of it. Betteroo gives you a personalized, gentle baby-sleep plan that adapts to your child and your situation. For Fresno parents juggling long Central Valley commutes, triple-digit summers that keep babies indoors, and family that often lives hours away, it factors in the realities of your week, not a one-size-fits-all schedule. Think of your mom group as the people and Betteroo as the plan. Many parents find the path looks like this: join a group like The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter) or Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center for the village, and use Betteroo to finally get everyone sleeping. You can learn more in our guide to the best sleep training apps.
Best for: Tired parents who have the community piece handled and need help with sleep.
A mom group helps you feel less alone. A sleep plan helps everyone sleep.
Get your personalized sleep planWhere to Find Mom Groups Across Fresno
The right group is usually a neighborhood question. Here is roughly where each area’s strongest options cluster.
North Fresno, Fig Garden, and Woodward Park
The newer, more affluent, family-heavy north side is where most of the organized mom-group activity clusters, around River Park shopping and Woodward Park. FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis runs its stroller classes and free Moms’ Night Out events here, the MOMS Club Fresno North chapter holds park days north of Herndon, and many Posh Mama Club gatherings land in this area. My Time Recovery’s in-person postpartum group also meets in north Fresno on East Shaw. If you live up here, you have the densest set of options in the metro within a short drive.
Downtown and the Tower District
The older urban core holds Community Regional Medical Center and its free Mother’s Resource Center, which is the most important no-cost resource for new parents anywhere in the city. The nearby Tower District is Fresno’s walkable arts-and-eclectic neighborhood, a rare pocket where you can actually stroll. There are fewer standing meetups based downtown, so parents here typically use the hospital’s free classes and support and then travel north or to Clovis for the friendship-focused groups. The Posh Mama Club’s metro-wide events are a good way to connect without being tied to one neighborhood.
Clovis and southeast Fresno
Clovis is the tight-knit suburban city next door, extremely family-oriented and so often paired with Fresno that group names say it outright, as with La Leche League of Fresno Clovis and FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis. The MOMS Club Clovis-Sanger chapter serves families on this side, and Old Town Clovis gives a walkable heart to gather around. Southeast Fresno, including Sunnyside, is more residential and working class with fewer dedicated groups, so families there usually travel north or to Clovis for meetups, or lean on the free hospital support and virtual options that reach everyone regardless of address.
How Much Do Fresno Mom Groups Cost?
The takeaway: cost is rarely the deciding factor. You can build a real support network in Fresno for free, and even the paid options are modest compared with most baby expenses. Choose on neighborhood and format first, price second.
What to Expect at Your First Meetup
Walking into a room of strangers with a newborn is intimidating. It helps to know what is normal and what to ask before you go.
Do I need to register, or can I just show up?
Free drop-ins and hospital groups usually welcome you with no registration. Facilitated cohorts and classes generally need sign-up in advance, so check the calendar first.
What is the age range of the babies?
Ask whether the group is organized by baby’s age. The best early bonding happens when babies are within a few months of each other, which is why due-date and newborn groups are so popular.
Is it just socializing, or is there a topic?
Some meetups are pure social, others are built around a workshop or facilitated discussion. Neither is better, but knowing in advance helps you pick one that matches your energy that day.
Showing up is easier when you are not running on two hours of sleep.
Build your baby’s sleep planHow to Choose the Right Fresno Mom Group for Your Family
How much structure do you want?
If you want a consistent circle that grows together, a facilitated cohort fits. If you prefer to come and go, a free drop-in or a large online community is the better match.
In-person, online, or both?
Online communities are unbeatable for 3am questions and logistics. In-person meetups are where real friendships form. Most parents end up using one of each, and there is no rule against joining several.
What stage are you in?
Expecting parents do well at class-based options. Newborn parents benefit most from age-matched groups and feeding meetups. As your child grows, neighborhood playgroups become the center of gravity.
When an Online Community Might Be Enough
Not everyone needs a weekly in-person meetup, and that is fine. If your schedule is unforgiving, a large online community can carry most of the load: somewhere to ask questions at odd hours, find hand-me-downs, and feel less alone without leaving the house. If the thing keeping you up at night is specifically sleep, an online community plus a structured plan can be more useful than any single meetup. Our guides to baby sleep schedules by age and common sleep training methods are a good place to start, and whether sleep training apps actually work is worth a read before you pay for anything.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best mom group in Fresno?
For most parents, The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter) is the best all-around choice. The best group for you, though, is usually the most active one closest to your neighborhood, so weigh location and format alongside reputation.
Are there free mom groups in Fresno?
Yes. Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center is a strong free option, and many hospitals, libraries, and La Leche League chapters also offer free new-parent meetups.
How much does a Fresno mom group cost?
Many are free. Local parent networks often charge a modest annual membership, while facilitated cohorts and fitness classes are paid, priced per session or series. Cost is rarely the deciding factor.
How do I find a mom group near me in Fresno?
Start with your neighborhood and your stage. Options like The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter) and Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center are good first stops, along with your hospital’s new-parent program and local parenting directories.
When should I join a mom group?
There is no wrong time. Many parents join during pregnancy, others in the newborn weeks when isolation hits hardest. Age-matched groups are easiest to bond in when you join early, since the babies grow up together.
Are there mom groups in Fresno for working parents?
Yes. Larger communities organize subgroups by schedule and offer evening or weekend meetups, and online communities help when a weekday-morning group does not fit your work life.
Find a Mom Group in Your City
Browse our guides to the best mom groups and new-parent communities in other cities.
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Your village helps you cope. Better sleep helps you thrive.
Join a mom group for the people, and let Betteroo handle the sleep. Get a gentle, personalized plan built around your baby and your life.
Start your free sleep plan7 Sources
- The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. National survey on parental loneliness and isolation. https://wexnermedical.osu.edu/
- Nowland R, Thomson G, et al. Experiencing loneliness in parenthood: a scoping review. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8580382/
- The Posh Mama Club (Fresno Chapter). Methodology and offerings. https://theposhmamaclub.com/
- Community Regional Mother’s Resource Center. Methodology and offerings. https://www.communitymedical.org/specialties-and-departments/labor-and-delivery/mothers-resource-center
- FIT4MOM North Fresno and Clovis. Methodology and offerings. https://fit4mom.com/locations
- My Time Recovery Postpartum Support Group. Methodology and offerings. https://www.mytimerecovery.com/mental-health/postpartum-depression-treatment-in-fresno-ca/
- La Leche League of Fresno Clovis. Methodology and offerings. https://lllfresno.org/






