Nania Torino
From 76 cm, up to 150 cm (~15 months to 12 years).

Pros / Cons
Pros
- Torino makes more sense than many cheap all-stage seats because it starts honestly at the later forward-facing stage instead of pretending to solve newborn use as well.
- The light, simple harness-to-booster format is easier to justify when you need a low-cost second-car or value-led everyday seat rather than a rotating premium model.
Cons
- It is a straightforward belt-installed budget seat, so overall substance and comfort are weaker than on stronger premium rivals.
- Because it is forward-facing only, it is only appropriate once rear-facing is genuinely behind you and the child is past 15 months.
Product Facts
- From Age
- 15 months
- Height
- 76-150 cm
- Forward Facing Only
- Yes
- More Info
- Product page
- Price/Buy
- Check Price
Nania Torino makes the most sense if you need a cheap later-stage seat and you are judging it against other low-cost harness-to-booster options, not against premium rotating systems. That is an important distinction. Torino is a forward-facing-only seat from 76 cm onward, which is actually part of why it can be a cleaner budget buy than the usual birth-to-12 promises at the bottom of the market. It covers the harness years first and then the booster stage, without pretending to solve newborn use.
The tradeoff is that it feels like a budget seat. That shows up in the lighter shell, simpler installation story, and lower overall comfort compared with stronger premium rivals. But if your real goal is a simple, low-cost later-stage seat for a second car or value-led everyday use, the narrow brief is easier to defend than a cheap all-stage seat that overreaches.