Eco & Sustainable

Buying Second-Hand Baby Gear: What Is Safe and What to Avoid

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Buying Second-Hand Baby Gear What Is Safe and What to Avoid

Baby items are used intensively for a short period — buying pre-loved is practical and green. But know the difference.

Safe to buy second-hand

  • Prams and pushchairs (check wheels and brakes)
  • Highchairs
  • Clothes and toys (check recalls)
  • Cots (buy a new mattress)

Do not buy second-hand

  • Car seats — invisible accident damage
  • Mattresses — SIDS risk; buy new per the Lullaby Trust
  • Bike helmets — internal damage from drops
  • Anything with an active recall — check gov.uk first

💬 Parents also asked

Yes, over the lifetime of a child -- though the exact impact depends on how you wash them (full loads, lower temperatures, line drying). They keep around 5,000 nappies out of landfill and save £500-£1,000 vs disposables. Most councils offer free trial kits.

Yes -- baby clothing is one of the safest things to buy second-hand. Wash thoroughly before use. The things to avoid buying second-hand are safety-critical items: car seats (unless you know the full history), mattresses (SIDS risk), and bike helmets.

Reusable cloth nappies have the lowest environmental impact when washed efficiently. If disposables are more practical for your life, eco disposables (Bambo Nature, Kit & Kin) are better than standard. The most sustainable option is always the one you'll actually use consistently.

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The MyBoo Team

Parents who got tired of conflicting Google results and generic AI answers. We write clear, honest, evidence-based guides -- because every parent deserves real answers without the overwhelm.

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