FableKids Nora i-Size
From 40 cm, up to 150 cm (~newborn to 12 years).

Pros / Cons
Pros
- Nora covers the core budget 360-seat brief well: ISOFIX, support leg, rear-facing use to 105 cm, and enough adjustment to work as a one-seat answer in one main car.
- For the price, it gives you more than a bare-minimum rotating seat because the shell, newborn insert, and recline story are all trying to make everyday use workable rather than just cheap.
Cons
- The weaker point is confidence around the brand and support ecosystem, so it is harder to recommend as blindly as a stronger-known rival when prices are close.
- It is still another long-span 40-150 cm compromise seat, which means bulk and less stage-by-stage specialization than a more curated multi-seat path.
Product Facts
- From Age
- Birth
- Max Weight
- 36 kg
- More Info
- Product page
- Price/Buy
- Check Price
FableKids Nora i-Size makes the most sense if the target is simple: you want the rotating all-stage formula at a genuinely budget level, but you still want ISOFIX, a support leg, and a rear-facing phase that feels real rather than token. On paper and in day-to-day use, it does a respectable job of covering the essentials for one main-car seat. That is why it can still make shortlist sense despite being a less established name.
The hesitation is not the basic spec sheet. It is the softer question of trust and after-sales confidence. When prices get close to better-known rivals, Nora becomes harder to defend because the shell is still bulky and the all-stage compromise is still there, but the reassurance is thinner. Double-check whether the savings are meaningful enough in your market, because that is what decides whether Nora feels smart or merely cheaper.