Best Strollers in Netherlands 2026
The right stroller gets used for years, so we prioritize the models that make the most sense in real family life. Our picks focus on comfort, handling, storage, newborn use, long-term value, and how well the stroller holds up once daily use begins.
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.
Our score: 9.69 / 10
Bugaboo Fox Cub
Dutch brand
Best: All-terrain
Bugaboo Fox Cub fits parents who want the Bugaboo all-terrain family idea in a 2-in-1 pram without stepping all the way up to the Fox 5 price. It is still a premium-size main stroller, so compare storage, car boot space, and whether you want the simpler Cub package.
Pros
- The 2-in-1 bassinet-and-seat setup gives it a clearer newborn path than a seat-only premium stroller.
Cons
- It is still a large premium stroller, not a compact travel solution.
Our score: 9.58 / 10
Chicco Urbino
Best: All-terrain
Chicco Urbino fits parents who want a light compact buggy with from-birth recline and a one-hand, self-standing fold. It is strongest for city travel and car/train days where quick handling matters more than a tiny cabin-size package.
Pros
- The one-hand fold and from-birth recline make it more useful than a bare holiday-only buggy.
Cons
- It is compact, but not the smallest option for strict cabin-bag packing.
Our score: 9.52 / 10
Kinderkraft Grande Plus
Best: All-terrain
Older value-focused everyday stroller, but still sensible if you want a roomier seat and bigger wheels without premium pricing
Kinderkraft Grande Plus fits parents who want a foldable travel-friendly buggy but still need a larger seat, suspended wheels, and from-birth recline. It is less cabin-bag tiny than the smallest travel buggies, so it suits car, train, and daily city use better than minimalist flights-only packing.
Pros
- The larger seat and suspended wheels make it more useful as an everyday compact than a bare-bones airport buggy.
Cons
- It is not the pick when the main goal is the smallest possible cabin-size fold.
Our score: 9.43 / 10
Bugaboo Dragonfly
Dutch brand
Best: All-terrain
Bugaboo Dragonfly is the premium city-stroller fit when one-hand folding, a smaller footprint, and a more polished urban chassis matter more than all-terrain size. It belongs with parents who want a premium main stroller for city life, not the biggest rough-route frame.
Pros
- One-hand folding in multiple configurations is the practical reason to compare it against larger premium strollers.
Cons
- It gives up some rough-route confidence and basket scale compared with bigger premium strollers.
Our score: 9.34 / 10
Kinderkraft TIK
Best: All-terrain
The Kinderkraft TIK is a light umbrella-style travel stroller with a recline and simple folding. It is most relevant for families who want a cheap small stroller for travel and shorter walks rather than a more substantial main stroller.
Pros
- Very low 6.5 kg weight, umbrella fold, and carry handle make it easy to keep as a travel or backup stroller.
Cons
- 6-month start and 15 kg limit make it a shorter-term and less flexible buy than stronger compact strollers.
Our score: 9.33 / 10
Maxi-Cosi Lara2
Dutch brand
Best: All-terrain
Long-running compact travel model that still makes sense as a lighter second stroller when price and portability are the real priorities
The Maxi-Cosi Lara2 is a light, compact travel stroller with automatic folding and a near-flat recline. It makes most sense for city use, flights, and families wanting a smoother secondary stroller that still feels reasonably complete.
Pros
- Low 6.4 kg weight and automatic fold reduce the carrying and folding friction that make many cheap compacts annoying in real travel use.
Cons
- Compact-first chassis still gives up basket space, wheel comfort, and rough-sidewalk confidence compared with bigger daily strollers.
Our score: 9.32 / 10
Lionelo Julie Air
Best: All-terrain
The Lionelo Julie Air is a travel stroller with auto-folding, a small fold, and more suspension than many simpler holiday buys. It is especially useful if you want a light stroller that still feels capable on both travel days and regular errands.
Pros
- Auto-fold, compact storage, and modest 7.5 kg weight make it easy to use for flights, car boots, and quick errands.
Cons
- It is still a travel stroller, so rougher ground and heavy daily storage demands will find the limits faster than on a stronger main stroller.
Our score: 9.20 / 10
Lionelo Julie One
Best: All-terrain
The Lionelo Julie One is a lightweight travel stroller for parents who want a compact fold, recline, and included carrying kit without paying for a premium travel model. It works as a trip or second buggy, with the usual compact-stroller limits on rougher ground.
Pros
- Compact folding, carry bag, and light stroller weight make it practical for car boots, trains, and holiday storage.
Cons
- Compact wheels and frame mean rough routes and heavy daily loads are not its best job.
Our score: 9.11 / 10
Cybex Balios S Lux
Best: All-terrain
Cybex Balios S Lux is the cleaner premium stroller fit if you want a full-size everyday frame, one-hand fold, height-adjustable handlebar, and large all-terrain wheels. It suits families comparing a polished main stroller more than a compact travel buggy.
Pros
- Large wheels and front suspension give it a stronger everyday walking case than smaller premium compacts.
Cons
- Full-size comfort also means more stroller to store, lift, and fit into smaller cars.
Our score: 9.11 / 10
Cybex EOS 2-in-1
Best: All-terrain
Cybex EOS 2-in-1 fits parents who want a premium-positioned stroller system with a reversible seat, newborn carrycot mode, and larger all-terrain wheels without moving into the biggest single-to-double frames. The main check is whether the 2-in-1 format is enough, because it is not a sibling-expansion system.
Pros
- Reversible seat and carrycot conversion give it a clearer from-birth story than a polished seat-only stroller.
Cons
- It does not solve the future sibling problem the way larger premium modular systems do.