Best Bike Trailers in Spain 2026

Research by Peter Crona

Last updated

The best bike trailers for families who want a more weather-ready, more comfortable, and more gear-friendly way to bring one or two children on rides than a basic rear bike seat usually offers.

Before You Buy

Confirm the current specs, bundle contents, and limits before buying, since details can change after our review.

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Why are scores between 9 and 10?

This is a curated shortlist of strong picks, not a full best-to-worst ranking. Small score gaps usually mean we have slightly more evidence for one model than another, not that the lower-scoring option is a poor choice.

So this is just another affiliate roundup with an arbitrary order?

No. We make these lists good enough that we use them ourselves and recommend them to friends and family. We turn the kind of research careful parents would normally do by hand into a repeatable process. Then we compare the evidence across the markets we cover and rank products with a model that gives more weight to stronger signals instead of simple averages or a fully hand-picked order based purely on editorial preference.

  1. Our score: 9.88 / 10

    Burley Bee Kids Bike Trailer

    Best: Bike-only

    Burley Bee fits families who want a real two-child bike trailer for regular rides, not a stroller-conversion system. Burley positions it as a lightweight bike-only trailer with double seating, so the tradeoff is that walks after parking the bike need a separate stroller plan.

    Pros

    • Bike-only design keeps it lighter and simpler than multisport trailers.

    Cons

    • Skip it if you need stroller conversion after parking the bike.
  2. Our score: 9.78 / 10

    Burley Encore X

    Best: Suspension

    A mid-premium Burley double trailer for families who want suspension and stroller compatibility without going to the top D’Lite tier.

    Pros

    • Suspension and padded seats help on mixed surfaces and longer rides.

    Cons

    • It is still a large double carrier and costs more than simple tow-behind trailers.
  3. Our score: 9.75 / 10

    Burley D'Lite™ X Kids Bike Trailer & Stroller

    A premium double trailer for families who want one carrier to handle cycling and stroller days, with adjustable suspension and reclining seats for longer outings.

    Pros

    • Suspension and reclining seats make it better suited to longer rides than basic fabric trailers.

    Cons

    • The high price and larger build make it harder to justify for occasional short rides.
  4. Our score: 9.73 / 10

    Remolque infantil Sepnine Kids

    Best: Affordable

    Budget two-child trailer that converts to a push stroller, best for families prioritizing low-cost mixed bike-and-walk use.

    Pros

    • The low-cost two-seat stroller conversion is the reason to shortlist it if budget matters more than premium polish.

    Cons

    • Expect more pre-buy checking around folding, storage, child limits, and daily durability than with better-established trailer brands.
  5. Our score: 9.68 / 10

    HOMCOM 2-Seat Bike Trailer

    The HOMCOM 2-Seat Bike Trailer works for families who want a lower-cost two-child trailer for shorter local rides rather than a stroller-style crossover. Check hitch fit, child limits, and storage space before relying on it for regular nursery or school-run towing.

    Pros

    • Two-seat layout covers the basic job of towing one or two children without moving into premium-trailer pricing.

    Cons

    • It is a tow-only value trailer, so it is less useful if you need a pushchair conversion or smoother all-day logistics.
  6. Our score: 9.67 / 10

    hauck Dryk Duo

    Hauck Dryk Duo is a child bike trailer to compare when the seat count and conversion mode match your riding routine. It belongs here because the reviewed listing supports child passenger trailer use; check child limits, hitch fit, and storage size before buying.

    Pros

    • Rear suspension and pneumatic wheels make it better for uneven paths than basic trailers.

    Cons

    • It is bulkier than bike-only trailers, so storage and doorway fit matter.
  7. Our score: 9.65 / 10

    hauck Dryk Duo Plus

    A two-seat trailer and stroller for families who want suspension, included walking hardware, and weather coverage for mixed bike-and-walk days.

    Pros

    • Rear suspension and pneumatic wheels help on uneven paths.

    Cons

    • It is a large double carrier, so check storage and doorway fit before buying.
  8. Our score: 9.64 / 10

    SAMAX Child Bike Trailer Jogger

    Best: Jogger mode

    Works as a budget active-family option when the main need is a child trailer that can convert for jogging-style pushing. It is less convincing as a polished daily stroller, so check folded storage, harness setup, and wheel handling before buying.

    Pros

    • Trailer-to-jogger conversion covers cycling and park use with one product

    Cons

    • More trailer-like than stroller-like, so daily manoeuvring and storage need checking
  9. Our score: 9.63 / 10

    KESSER Sport-RX

    The KESSER Sport-RX is a value-led two-seat bike trailer with jogger conversion, suspension, and the kind of mixed-use flexibility that makes more sense for family errands and park rides than a basic tow-only trailer.

    Pros

    • Jogger conversion, suspension, and a two-seat cabin give it a more flexible family-use case than basic tow-only trailers.

    Cons

    • It still sits in the value end of the market, so polish and long-distance towing feel are not as strong as better premium trailers.
  10. Our score: 9.52 / 10

    FUXTEC FX-FA1S

    The FUXTEC FX-FA1S suits families who want a more compact single-seat trailer-and-buggy crossover instead of defaulting to a bulkier two-seat setup.

    Pros

    • The single-seat crossover format makes more sense than a larger two-seat trailer if you usually ride and walk with one child.

    Cons

    • It gives up the room and longer-term sibling flexibility that make stronger two-seat trailers easier to justify for larger families.
  11. Our score: 9.50 / 10

    Kinderkraft NAVA

    Kinderkraft NAVA is a child bike trailer to compare when the seat count and conversion mode match your riding routine. It belongs here because the reviewed listing supports child passenger trailer use; check child limits, hitch fit, and storage size before buying.

    Pros

    • Adjustable suspension and inflatable wheels help on mixed city paths.

    Cons

    • As a double multisport carrier, it still needs meaningful storage space.
  12. Our score: 9.50 / 10

    Thule Coaster XT

    Thule Coaster XT is a child bike trailer to compare when the seat count and conversion mode match your riding routine. It belongs here because the reviewed listing supports child passenger trailer use; check child limits, hitch fit, and storage size before buying.

    Pros

    • It gives you a cleaner premium-brand trailer-and-stroller setup at a more approachable price than Thule's more advanced multisport models.

    Cons

    • It is a simpler crossover, so suspension and richer ride comfort sit behind the stronger Chariot options.
  13. Our score: 9.47 / 10

    KESSER 360 Bike Trailer

    The KESSER 360 Bike Trailer fits families who want a two-seat trailer with stroller conversion and a fuller feature set than the simplest budget models, without moving all the way into premium pricing.

    Pros

    • Its two-seat crossover setup gives it a more flexible family-use case than basic tow-only trailers.

    Cons

    • It still sits below the premium end of the market on finish and long-ride polish.
  14. Our score: 9.39 / 10

    Klarfit GoKiddo

    The Klarfit GoKiddo suits families who want a two-seat trailer-and-buggy crossover with more adjustability and braking hardware than the cheapest budget options, without moving into premium-brand pricing.

    Pros

    • The two-seat crossover setup, integrated brakes, and adjustable seating make it feel more fully featured than the bare-budget trailer options.

    Cons

    • It still sits below the stronger premium trailer brands on trust, refinement, and overall polish.
  15. Our score: 9.39 / 10

    Flyer DuoFlex

    A double trailer and stroller for families who want an easy bike-to-walk transition plus a fold that can roll into storage.

    Pros

    • Tool-free conversion is useful for daycare runs, parks, and errands where the bike leg is only part of the trip.

    Cons

    • It is less sport-focused than premium suspension trailers for rough paths or running.
  16. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    FUXTEC Sport Cruiser

    Two-seat convertible trailer for families who want a mid-priced child trailer with buggy conversion and included cycling hitch.

    Pros

    • Two seats, buggy conversion, and a supplied bike hitch make it more useful for mixed errands than a tow-only budget trailer.

    Cons

    • Its value depends on whether the wider two-seat trailer format fits your storage, lift, and daily route.
  17. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    FUXTEC Sportfux FX-FA1

    The FUXTEC Sportfux FX-FA1 suits families who want a two-seat trailer and buggy conversion with more weather protection and practical storage than the cheapest crossover options, without paying Thule-level pricing.

    Pros

    • The two-seat crossover layout, folding frame, and included weather-protection details give it more everyday utility than a bare-bones tow-only trailer.

    Cons

    • It is still a less proven mid-range pick than the strongest premium trailer brands, so brand confidence and polish are not the main reasons to buy it.
  18. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    VEVOR remolque infantil doble

    VEVOR Double Child Bike Trailer is for families who want a lower-cost two-seat trailer for local rides and do not need premium multisport polish. The useful check is whether the steel-frame weight and folded size fit your storage and lifting reality.

    Pros

    • Two-seat cabin and covered trailer format solve the basic school-run or park-ride job at a lower price.

    Cons

    • Heavier value-trailer construction can be more awkward to lift, store, and tow than premium lightweight trailers.
  19. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Deryan 2-in-1 Bike Trailer Jogger

    A better fit for active families who want one child trailer that can also work as a jogger-style stroller. Check the trailer width, bike storage space, and local trailer rules before treating it like an everyday pushchair.

    Pros

    • Bike-trailer and jogger modes make it more versatile for active weekends

    Cons

    • Bulk and trailer setup are overkill for shops, lifts, and narrow pavements
  20. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Hamax Breeze

    A high-end multisport child trailer for families who want cycling, strolling, and jogging flexibility with a more refined cabin and braking setup.

    Pros

    • Multisport setup is useful when the same carrier needs to cover bike rides, walks, and running routes.

    Cons

    • The price is premium, so it is overkill for occasional park rides.