Best High Chairs Under £100 UK 2026 Budget Picks That Don’t Cut Corners on the Things That Matter
The best high chairs under £100 in the UK for 2026 — with honest reviews of what you actually get in this price bracket, which features are genuinely useful versus unnecessary, and the honest case for the £20 IKEA Antilop over every other option here.
What Actually Matters at This Price
The under-£100 high chair market includes dozens of options, most of which converge on the same basic feature set. The features that genuinely affect daily use — and should drive your decision — are the footrest, tray design and cleaning ease. Features that are often listed but matter less than they appear: recline positions (rarely used after the first month), padded seat comfort (babies in high chairs are there for meals, not extended sitting), and the number of height-adjustment positions.
The footrest is the single most important ergonomic feature and the one most commonly absent or poorly implemented in this price range. A supported footrest promotes trunk stability and reduces mealtime fatigue. Look for four or more positions that genuinely accommodate the child’s leg length. The tray should have a one-hand release and be dishwasher safe. Cleaning ease matters every single day — a chair with fabric inserts, creviced recline mechanisms or non-removable padding will frustrate you daily.
① Best Overall Under £100
The Joie Mimzy Snacker is the under-£100 chair we recommend for most families. Its four-position adjustable footrest — the feature most often missing at this price — provides genuine postural support throughout the weaning years. The one-hand tray release and dishwasher-safe tray make daily cleaning fast. Three recline positions are useful in the first 6–8 months of weaning. The compact fold stores the chair neatly. At £59 it delivers more than most £100–£150 chairs offer. For a full review see our Joie Mimzy Snacker review.
② Best Value Under £100
The IKEA Antilop at £20 is the single best value purchase in the entire high chair category. Smooth polypropylene shell, dishwasher-safe tray included, detachable legs for portability, indestructible under normal use, and the easiest to clean of any chair reviewed. The footrest gap is real — a £25 third-party add-on addresses it, bringing the total to £45 — still the lowest total cost reviewed here for a chair with supported feet. For the full case see our IKEA Antilop review.
③ Best for Small Spaces
The Graco Slim Snacker’s defining feature is its fold: at 8cm wide when closed, it is the slimmest-folding high chair available under £100 and can be stored vertically in a gap between the fridge and kitchen unit without protruding. For urban families in flats or small houses where kitchen space is genuinely limited, this fold profile is a practical advantage that no other reviewed chair matches. It includes a 6-position adjustable footrest and a three-position tray adjustment — a better feature set than the Joie Mimzy in some respects, at £11 more. For families where the slim fold is not a priority, the Mimzy is the better-value choice. For flat-dwellers where it is — the Graco earns its place.
④ Best Design Under £100
The Cosatto Waffle sits at exactly £99 — the top of this guide’s price range — and its primary distinguishing feature is design: Cosatto offers the Waffle in bold, distinctive patterns that look significantly more considered than the standard baby-product aesthetic. It also includes six height adjustment positions (which allow the chair to fit different table heights), an adjustable footrest and a dishwasher-safe tray. On pure feature-for-price grounds it does not outperform the Joie Mimzy Snacker — but for families for whom the kitchen chair’s aesthetic in their home matters, the Cosatto’s design options justify the £40 premium.
Joie Mimzy Snacker for most families. IKEA Antilop + footrest if you prioritise cleaning ease and value above all else.
The Joie Mimzy Snacker at £59 is the best all-round high chair under £100 — it includes everything that matters (adjustable footrest, dishwasher tray, recline, compact fold) without compromise. For families where cleaning ease is the absolute priority and ergonomics can be addressed with a £25 add-on, the IKEA Antilop’s total £45 cost and superior cleaning make it the stronger purchase. The Graco Slim Snacker earns its place for flat-dwellers where 8cm folded width matters. The Cosatto Waffle is for families who care about the chair looking right in their home and are happy to pay £40 more for that.
If budget is truly unlimited in this under-£100 guide — see our Stokke Tripp Trapp review for the chair that grows from weaning to adulthood.

