Quantifying the fitness costs of reproduction is essential to understand the evolution of reproductive behavior. Recent work shows that increased reproductive investment reduced parental survival in more competitive environments. Here we experimentally test the hypothesis that reproductive investment has a negative effect on the ability of parents to compete for resources in later life. In a nest-box population of Great tits (Parus major), we manipulated family size by reducing or enlarging broods with 2 or 3 nestlings, relative to a control group, in 2 years (N = 237 broods). Parental feeding effort was positively related to experimental family size but leveled off for the enlarged broods. In the next breeding season we manipulated the nes...