Retrospec Rover Kids Bike Trailer

Pros / Cons
Pros
- Double-passenger trailer format and rear storage make it useful when you need to tow more than one child or carry extra outing gear.
- Foldable frame, 16-inch wheels, and reflector details give it a stronger everyday case than very basic cargo-style trailers.
Cons
- It is still a tow-behind trailer, so storage space, bike handling, and parking are bigger commitments than with a child bike seat.
- The listing is relatively expensive, so it makes most sense if you specifically need the enclosed double-trailer setup rather than occasional short rides.
Product Facts
- Use
- Bike-only
- Seats
- 2
- Product page
- Product page
- Price/Buy
- Check Price
Retrospec Rover fits families who already cycle and want a trailer for bigger planned rides rather than a quick child-seat add-on. The double-passenger format and rear storage make sense when you need to carry one or two children plus outing gear, and when weather cover matters more than a narrow bicycle profile.
The tradeoff is commitment. A tow-behind trailer needs storage space, calmer routes, careful hitch setup, and a rider comfortable with extra length and braking distance. Before buying, confirm bike compatibility, folded storage, child weight limits, and whether a front or rear child seat would be simpler for short local rides.
Because trailers change the bicycle, route choice matters as much as the product. Prefer calm park roads and predictable surfaces, check the hitch before every ride, and avoid treating a trailer as a quick substitute for a normal child bike seat.