Are Expensive Pushchairs Worth It?

Our three pushchairs, a Hauck Sport Buggy (low-end), Bugaboo Donkey (high-end) and Joie Lifetrax 4 (mid-range).

Are expensive pushchairs worth it? We asked ourselves that before paying up for our own premium pushchair. In our case, the answer ended up being yes, but only because we used the pushchair a lot, cared a lot about newborn comfort, and expected to keep or resell it well.

Often yes, but only when the more expensive pushchair solves a real daily problem. Premium pushchairs usually win on suspension, build quality, resale value, and newborn comfort, but many families are better off with a good mid-range pushchair or a used premium one.

If you first want to understand why pushchair prices get so high, read Why are pushchairs so expensive?. If you want concrete price bands, see How much does a pushchair cost?.

The question came first. Later, after owning three very different pushchairs, Bugaboo Donkey, Joie Litetrax 4, and Hauck Sport Buggy, our answer became much clearer. Together they gave us a clearer sense of what high-end, mid-range, and low-end pushchairs actually offer in real life. We were happy with all three, but they made sense at different times and for different jobs.

Quick answer: when is premium actually worth it?

Premium is easiest to justify if most of these are true:

  • you use the pushchair heavily, often every day
  • you care a lot about newborn comfort and sleep
  • you walk on rough pavements, gravel, snow, or park paths
  • you want something that folds well and stays pleasant to use for years
  • you expect to resell it later and buy from a brand that holds value

Premium is much harder to justify if most of these are true:

  • the pushchair is mostly for short errands or occasional use
  • you mainly need a light second pushchair or travel pushchair
  • you are on smooth city pavements and do not push for long stretches
  • the expensive model is not clearly better where it counts
  • the biggest difference seems to be styling, not ride quality or durability

For many families, the smartest answer is neither “buy premium new” nor “buy the cheapest option.” It is “buy solid mid-range” or “buy a premium pushchair on the used market.”

What does the extra money actually buy?

If you asked me to do a blind test with our three pushchairs, I am confident I could tell which was high-end, mid-range, and low-end. You can feel that the Bugaboo is built to a higher standard. Our Bugaboo Donkey worked reliably for more than eight years, and the only repair we needed was changing an inner tube after a flat tyre.

A smoother ride and easier naps

This was the clearest difference for us. The shock absorption of our pushchairs tracked price closely. With its excellent suspension and large air-filled wheels, Bugaboo Donkey gave a noticeably smoother ride, even on rougher walks in the forest. That matters a lot with a newborn. Both our children fell asleep and stayed asleep more easily in the Bugaboo than in our cheaper pushchairs.

If pushchair walks are a big part of your day, that difference can become obvious very quickly.

A better newborn setup

While many pushchairs can technically be used from birth on paper, we think a real carrycot with a roomy, flat surface is one of the strongest arguments for paying more. It is usually more comfortable for the baby and more straightforward for you, especially with a first child.

Bugaboo Donkey also had excellent ventilation. In our experience, premium models often do better here too, sometimes with fabrics or mattress setups that feel noticeably better in warmer weather.

Less daily friction for parents

Some of the premium value is really parent value. Better handling, less rattling, stronger folding hardware, easier curb handling, smoother pushing one-handed for a moment while opening a door, and less general annoyance over time are all easy to underestimate in a showroom and easy to appreciate after months of use.

Better resale value

This is one of the biggest reasons premium can make financial sense. A well-known premium pushchair often resells for far more than a cheap one. That means the real cost gap can be smaller than the original retail prices suggest. In our case, that made the expensive pushchair much easier to justify.

When expensive is not actually worth it

This is the part many articles gloss over: a high price is not the same thing as high value.

We would be cautious if a pushchair is expensive mainly because:

  • it looks premium but does not ride clearly better
  • the newborn setup is only technically acceptable, not genuinely good
  • the brand is weak on resale value
  • the upgrade is mostly styling or accessories
  • you are paying a lot for features you will rarely use

If you cannot try the pushchair in person, focus on the wheels, suspension, fold, ventilation, build quality, and whether the brand has a strong long-term reputation. Unknown brands that mostly look attractive in photos are where we would be most careful.

Does the answer change for a baby versus a toddler?

Yes, quite a lot.

For a baby

This is when premium made the strongest case for us. The main upside was not status. It was a smoother, calmer, more newborn-friendly setup. Better suspension, a proper carrycot, better ventilation, and an overall more stable ride mattered most when our children were smallest.

We would not say every family needs a premium pushchair for a baby, but this is the stage where paying more is easiest to defend.

For a toddler

The logic changes. Toddlers usually care less about pushchair refinement than newborns do. At that point, the bigger benefit is often for you: easier pushing, less rattling, better rough-ground performance, and less maintenance.

Once our son was old enough, we also bought a cheaper pushchair, the Hauck Sport Buggy, for travel. It was much less comfortable for us as parents, but our son barely cared which pushchair he was sitting in. That is a useful boundary. Premium still has benefits with a toddler, but they are often more parent-facing than child-facing.

What if your budget is tighter?

If money is tight, we would not jump straight from “premium is nice” to “therefore spend more than is comfortable.” The best value move is often one of these:

  • buy a strong mid-range pushchair and skip luxury touches
  • buy premium used, especially for newborn use
  • buy one better main pushchair and a cheaper travel pushchair later

We especially recommend checking the second-hand market if you want premium quality without paying full price. This is one of the best areas of baby gear to buy used if the pushchair is in good condition and parts are still available.

Final Thoughts

Premium pushchairs can absolutely be worth it, but mostly when they make everyday life meaningfully easier: smoother naps, better newborn comfort, easier handling, stronger durability, and better resale value. If those things matter a lot in your routine, the higher price can be rational. If they do not, a good mid-range pushchair or a used premium pushchair is often the smarter buy.

If you want to understand why pushchair prices get so high in the first place, read Why are pushchairs so expensive?. If you want to compare market price bands before deciding, see How much does a pushchair cost?.