Stokke Tripp Trapp vs Joie Mimzy UK 2026 — Premium vs Budget High Chair | Modern Parenting
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Stokke Tripp Trapp vs Joie Mimzy Is the Premium High Chair Worth Five Times the Price?

An honest comparison of the Stokke Tripp Trapp and Joie Mimzy Snacker — two of the UK’s most popular high chairs at opposite ends of the price spectrum. We look at longevity, ergonomics, cleaning, resale value and real total cost to find out which is actually better value.

Updated January 2026 2 chairs compared 14 min read £59 vs £299
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At a Glance

Stokke Tripp Trapp Grows from baby to adult — used for years From £299 chair • baby set add-on £69
Age range6 months (with baby set) to adult
MaterialSolid beech wood
TrayOptional add-on (£39) — not included
FootrestYes — adjustable, built-in
ReclineNo — upright only
Folds flatNo
Resale valueVery high — £100–£200 second-hand
Joie Mimzy Snacker Full-feature high chair at budget price From £59 • tray included
Age range6 months to approximately 3 years / 15kg
MaterialSteel frame, plastic seat and tray
TrayYes — included, dishwasher safe
FootrestYes — adjustable
ReclineYes — 3 positions
Folds flatYes — compact fold
Resale valueLow — £10–£20 second-hand

① Stokke Tripp Trapp — The Iconic Premium

The Stokke Tripp Trapp has been in continuous production since 1972 and is one of the most recognisable pieces of children’s furniture in the world. Its design premise is deceptively simple: a wooden chair with two adjustable horizontal boards — a seat board and a footrest — that slide up and down the angled side rails to accommodate the child at every stage of growth. From a 6-month-old using the baby set harness, through toddler, child and school-age use, and finally as a regular chair for a teenager or adult — the Tripp Trapp is designed to last a lifetime.

The ergonomic argument is strong: the adjustable footrest maintains the child’s feet supported (rather than dangling), which promotes upright posture and reduces fatigue during meals. Research on children’s posture consistently shows that supported feet improve trunk stability and comfort at the table — the Tripp Trapp is designed around this principle while most budget high chairs only gesture towards it. The beech wood construction is solid, repairable (replacement parts are available) and comes with a 7-year guarantee.

The honest limitations: the Tripp Trapp requires the £69 baby set (harness and guard rail) for use from 6 months — it is not safe without it for young babies. The tray is a further £39 add-on. The total entry cost with all accessories is approximately £407. It does not recline, which some parents find limiting for very young babies in the early weaning weeks. And it does not fold — once placed, it occupies its footprint permanently.

② Joie Mimzy Snacker — The Budget Contender

The Joie Mimzy Snacker at £59 is the UK’s bestselling budget high chair and consistently tops independent value rankings in the under-£100 category. Unlike many budget chairs that cut corners on the features that matter most for daily use, the Mimzy includes a dishwasher-safe tray (from the outset, no add-on required), an adjustable footrest, three recline positions, a five-point harness, and a compact fold that stores the chair in approximately a third of its open footprint.

The adjustable footrest — typically absent or poorly implemented at this price — is the Mimzy’s strongest ergonomic feature and the primary reason it appears in this comparison with the Tripp Trapp. Both chairs support the feet. The Mimzy does it with four adjustable positions; the Tripp Trapp with infinitely adjustable sliding boards. In practice, the Mimzy’s footrest adjustment is adequate through the high chair stage.

The Mimzy’s steel and plastic construction is robust for its price tier. It cleans easily, the tray lifts off with one hand for dishwasher cleaning, and the padded seat wipes down. Where it differs from the Tripp Trapp most significantly is longevity — the Mimzy is designed for the high chair years (approximately 6 months to 3 years), not lifetime use. It will not be a teenager’s chair. And it resells for £10–£20 rather than £150–£200.

③ Head-to-Head Comparison

Category
Stokke Tripp Trapp
Joie Mimzy Snacker
Price (chair only)
£299
£59Mimzy wins
Full setup cost
£407 (chair + baby set + tray)
£59 (everything included)Mimzy wins
Age range
6 months to adult (lifetime)Tripp Trapp wins
6 months to ~3 years
Footrest
Infinitely adjustable sliding boardTripp Trapp wins
4-position adjustable
Tray included
No — £39 add-on
Yes — dishwasher safeMimzy wins
Recline
No — upright only
3 positionsMimzy wins
Folds flat
No — fixed footprint
Yes — compact foldMimzy wins
Build quality
Solid beech wood — heirloom qualityTripp Trapp wins
Steel and plastic — adequate for high chair years
Cleaning
Moderate — wood and fabric cushion
Easy — dishwasher tray, wipe-clean seatMimzy wins
Resale value
Very high — £150–£200Tripp Trapp wins
Low — £10–£20
Design
Iconic — works as adult furnitureTripp Trapp wins
Functional — looks like a high chair
Guarantee
7 yearsTripp Trapp wins
2 years

④ Cleaning — The Real Daily Difference

Any parent who has cleaned a high chair after a bowl of bolognese or pureed squash will tell you that cleaning ease is not a minor consideration — it is something you deal with multiple times every day for years. On this dimension, the Joie Mimzy Snacker has a genuine practical advantage. The tray lifts off with one hand and goes into the dishwasher. The seat wipes down with a damp cloth. The footrest is smooth plastic. There are no crevices in the main food-contact areas that require a toothpick to clean.

The Stokke Tripp Trapp requires the cushion (sold separately at approximately £39) to be comfortable for young children — and that cushion, while machine washable, requires removing and replacing. The wooden seat board and frame clean easily enough, but food that gets into the joint between the seat board and the harness of the baby set requires attention. Parents who do not buy the optional cushion find the wooden seat adequate but confirm the Mimzy’s smooth plastic seat is quicker to wipe. The Tripp Trapp cleans well — but the Mimzy cleans more easily.

⑤ Real Cost Over Time — Including Resale

Five-year real cost comparison
Stokke Tripp Trapp
Chair£299
Baby set (required)£69
Tray (optional)£39
Cushion (optional)£39
Less resale value−£160
Net 5-year cost~£286
Joie Mimzy Snacker
Chair (everything included)£59
Extras needed£0
  
  
Less resale value−£12
Net 5-year cost~£47

The net cost comparison over five years (through the high chair stage) is approximately £286 for the Tripp Trapp versus £47 for the Mimzy — a difference of £239. The Tripp Trapp’s strong resale value narrows the gap significantly (it retains more than half its purchase price second-hand), but the Mimzy is still substantially cheaper in net terms. If the Tripp Trapp continues to be used into the school-age and teenage years — as many are — its per-year cost falls further. A Tripp Trapp used for 10 years and sold for £150 has a net cost of approximately £296 over that period — or about £30 per year, not dramatically more than the Mimzy.

💰 The second-hand Tripp Trapp argument: Stokke Tripp Trapps sell on Facebook Marketplace, eBay and NCT Nearly New Sales for £80–£150. A second-hand Tripp Trapp in good condition (they are very durable) bought for £100 and resold for £80 costs approximately £20 net for the high chair years. At that net cost, the Tripp Trapp’s build quality and ergonomics become an obvious choice over the Mimzy. The second-hand market changes the comparison significantly.
Our verdict

Buy the Tripp Trapp second-hand. Or buy the Mimzy new. Both are the right answer depending on your budget and priorities.

The Joie Mimzy Snacker is the honest recommendation for families who cannot or do not want to spend significantly on a high chair. It includes everything needed, cleans easily, adjusts correctly, and does the job well for the three or so years a high chair is needed. At £59 it is extraordinary value and there is no meaningful ergonomic or safety case against it.

The Stokke Tripp Trapp is the right choice if you want a chair that grows with your child into adulthood, that looks as good as any adult furniture in your home, and that will be used long after the high chair years. The smartest purchase route is second-hand — a well-maintained Tripp Trapp bought for £80–£120 and resold for a similar price after use gives you premium ergonomics at budget-chair net cost. If you are buying new and the £407 all-in price is within budget without strain, the Tripp Trapp is a genuinely excellent long-term purchase. If £407 requires financial juggling in the first year of parenthood — buy the Mimzy without hesitation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Stokke Tripp Trapp come with everything you need?+
No — this is the most important thing to know before buying. The £299 chair price does not include the baby set (harness and guard rail, required for use with babies under approximately 3 years) at £69, the tray at £39, or the seat cushion at £39. The minimum required spend for use from 6 months is £368 (chair + baby set). Most families buy the tray and cushion too, bringing the total to £446. This is a significant contrast with the Joie Mimzy Snacker’s all-in £59 including tray and harness.
Is the Joie Mimzy Snacker safe?+
Yes. The Joie Mimzy Snacker meets all UK and EU safety standards for high chairs. It includes a 5-point harness and has been tested to the relevant EN standard. Joie is a reputable brand with a strong UK distribution and safety track record. There is no safety argument for the Tripp Trapp over the Mimzy — both are safe. The differences between them are ergonomic, practical and aesthetic — not safety-related.
Can I buy a Stokke Tripp Trapp second-hand safely?+
Yes — unlike car seats, which should generally not be bought second-hand without knowing their full history, high chairs are safe to buy second-hand if the chair is in good structural condition and all required components are present. Check for: no cracks in the wood (particularly at the joint where horizontal boards meet vertical rails), all screws present and functional, and that the baby set (if included) shows no significant wear on the harness buckle. Replacement parts are available from Stokke if needed. Stokke Tripp Trapps made after 2003 use the current adjustment slot system and can use current accessories.
Which chair is better for BLW?+
Both work well for baby-led weaning. The key BLW requirement is a supported footrest — both chairs provide this. The Tripp Trapp’s tray option allows the baby to eat directly from the tray surface, which BLW practitioners sometimes prefer for allowing the baby to self-serve from a flat surface. The Mimzy’s included tray is equally functional. The Tripp Trapp without a tray (using the family table directly) is the classic BLW setup — the baby sits at table height with the family, reinforcing shared mealtimes from the outset. For this use case, the Tripp Trapp’s design is specifically optimised and the Mimzy less so.
Comparison based on editorial research as of January 2026. Prices correct at publication. Resale values are estimates based on UK marketplace data. Affiliate links: some links earn a small commission. Full disclosure →