Best Premium Strollers in Spain 2026

Research by Peter Crona

Last updated

Recently reviewed

Looking for a premium stroller in Spain? This shortlist keeps the high-end models that really justify the price with better ride comfort, stronger newborn practicality, better materials, and more convincing long-term value in daily life.

Before You Buy

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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: 9.68 / 10

    Cybex Beezy

    Best: Compact

    Cybex Beezy is a compact stroller for families who want a more everyday-feeling travel buggy with newborn-friendly recline. The decision is whether its fold and wheel comfort justify choosing it over a smaller micro stroller.

    Pros

    • Cybex Beezy balances compact travel size with a more substantial newborn-ready setup

    Cons

    • Still bulkier than true ultra-compact strollers when overhead storage is the priority
  2. Our score: 9.62 / 10

    Ergobaby Metro 3 Deluxe

    Ergobaby Metro 3 Deluxe fits families who want a premium compact stroller that still feels credible for newborn and everyday use. The buy reason is the balance of smaller fold, stronger seat comfort, and travel handling; the tradeoff is that it is not as cheap or as minimal as basic cabin strollers.

    Pros

    • Compact fold and newborn-ready positioning make it easier to justify as a serious travel stroller.

    Cons

    • It costs enough that parents should compare whether they need premium compact comfort or just occasional travel backup.
  3. Our score: 9.48 / 10

    Ergobaby Metro+ Deluxe

    Ergobaby Metro+ Deluxe fits parents who want a compact stroller that still cares about padding, handle height, and newborn-friendly recline. It is heavier than the smallest travel buggies, but the comfort story is stronger for regular city days.

    Pros

    • The padded seat, adjustable handle, and compact fold make it more credible as a daily compact than a flights-only buggy.

    Cons

    • The 8 kg-plus weight is noticeable if stair carrying is the main travel problem.
  4. Our score: 9.44 / 10

    Bugaboo Butterfly 2

    Best: Ultra-compact

    Bugaboo Butterfly 2 is a premium compact stroller for families prioritising a polished one-hand fold, travel size, and a more refined cabin-style buggy feel. It is less compelling if a newborn bassinet or rough-route ride is the main need.

    Pros

    • The one-hand compact fold and premium Bugaboo finish fit travel and apartment storage well.

    Cons

    • It should be compared as a compact stroller, not as a full newborn pram system.
  5. Our score: 9.41 / 10

    Cybex Gazelle S

    Best: Single-to-double

    Long-running single-to-double platform that still makes sense if sibling flexibility matters more than having the newest chassis

    Cybex Gazelle S is a premium single-to-double stroller for families who want one frame that can expand into a two-child setup instead of buying a fixed double immediately.

    Pros

    • Duo-mode capacity and multiple configurations make it useful when sibling plans or newborn-plus-toddler needs are still evolving.

    Cons

    • The value case depends on actually needing the expansion system; it is more stroller than many families need for single-child use.
  6. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Bugaboo Donkey 6

    Best: All-terrain

    Bugaboo Donkey 6 fits families who want one premium stroller that can move from a single setup to a real side-by-side sibling setup. The reason to consider it is flexibility and ride quality; the pre-buy check is whether its width, storage needs, and price make sense for daily Canadian use.

    Pros

    • Mono-to-duo flexibility lets it cover one child now and two children later without changing stroller families.

    Cons

    • The side-by-side chassis is still a real space commitment in condos, lifts, and smaller trunks.
  7. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Bugaboo Fox 5 Renew

    Bugaboo Fox 5 Renew is the premium all-terrain stroller fit for families who want one polished main stroller with a real bassinet setup and calmer ride quality on rougher pavements. For overnight sleep, only use the bassinet setup exactly as Bugaboo currently approves it; the stroller seat itself is not an overnight-sleep claim.

    Pros

    • Large all-terrain wheels, suspension, and a proper bassinet setup give it a stronger main-stroller case than many compact premium options.

    Cons

    • The price and size only make sense if you will use the ride quality, bassinet stage, and outdoor confidence often.
  8. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Doona I Desert Green

    Doona I is the premium pick for families who want the car-seat-to-stroller concept in one compact system rather than a separate pram frame. It is strongest for short urban transfers and travel days, not long all-day walks.

    Pros

    • The integrated car-seat/stroller format removes one major piece of gear for quick transfers.

    Cons

    • Daily comfort and child space are less flexible than with a full stroller system.
  9. Our score: 9.33 / 10

    Stokke YOYO3 Newborn Bundle

    Stokke YOYO3 with newborn carrycot is the premium compact route for parents who want the YOYO fold logic but need a from-birth setup. It is best for stairs, travel, and tight storage rather than rough everyday routes.

    Pros

    • The bundle keeps the compact YOYO idea while adding a newborn carrycot path.

    Cons

    • Small wheels and compact proportions are still the tradeoff versus a larger full-size stroller.