FeedingReviews & Guides.
From first foods to breast pumps — weaning guides, high chair reviews, steriliser comparisons and bottle recommendations for UK parents at every stage of their feeding journey.
SolidsSee weaning guides →
First Foods & Weaning Guide UK
When to start, what to give first, allergen introduction and BLW vs purees. NHS-aligned with honest kit recommendations.Read guide →Approach GuideBaby-Led Weaning Guide UK
What BLW is, how to start safely, what to serve at every stage, and which high chairs and bibs actually work for it.Read guide →Best Breast Pumps UK 2026
Electric, manual and wearable pumps compared for output, noise, comfort and value. Direct recommendation by lifestyle type.Read guide →Review9.2 / 10Elvie Stride Review
Hands-free, silent, app-connected. The pump for parents returning to work who need complete discretion above everything else.Read review →& BottlesSee all guides →
Best Baby Bottles UK 2026
Anti-colic, vented, wide-neck and breast-like bottles compared for ease of use, cleaning and reducing wind.Read guide →Review9.0 / 10Tommee Tippee Perfect Prep D&N
Formula at body temperature in under two minutes. Does it justify its price for formula-feeding families?Read review →ChairsSee all reviews →
Best High Chairs UK 2026
IKEA Antilop at £25 to Stokke Tripp Trapp at £295 — every budget reviewed with a direct recommendation at each price point.Read guide →Review9.5 / 10Stokke Tripp Trapp Review
Grows from newborn to adult, lifetime guarantee. The only high chair you’ll ever need to buy — and whether it earns its price.Read review →MakersSee all reviews →
Best Baby Food Makers UK 2026
Steam-and-blend machines, hand blenders and food processors — compared for batch cooking, cleaning ease and value.Read guide →Review8.9 / 10Béaba Babycook Neo Review
The most popular all-in-one baby food maker in the UK. Steam, blend, defrost. Does the premium price make sense?Read review →Start weaning at around 6 months — not before 4
NHS guidance is clear: solid foods should be introduced at around 6 months, not before 4 months. Signs of readiness include sitting with minimal support, losing the tongue-thrust reflex, and showing interest in food. Our weaning guide covers exactly what to look for and how to start safely — without pressure to begin early or late.
Read the full weaning guide →The best breast pump depends entirely on your lifestyle, not spec
A wearable pump is pointless if you work from home. A double electric is overkill if you’re only pumping occasionally. Our breast pump guide routes recommendations by lifestyle — working parents, occasional pumpers, exclusively pumping — rather than defaulting to the most-searched brand.
Find the right pump →Introduce all 14 major allergens by 12 months
Current NHS guidance recommends introducing all 14 major allergens — including peanuts, egg, milk and wheat — by 12 months. Early introduction has been shown to reduce allergy risk. Our allergen introduction guide covers when, how and in what form to offer each one safely, and what to do if you’re nervous about it.
Read the allergen guide →An expensive high chair is only worth it if it genuinely lasts
The Stokke Tripp Trapp at £295 is only good value if you use it for 5+ years and it survives a second child. The IKEA Antilop at £25 is genuinely excellent for the first weaning year. Our high chair guide gives a direct recommendation at every budget without reflexively defaulting to premium — because sometimes the cheap option genuinely wins.
Find the right high chair →The feeding products market is full of expensive kit that gets used twice. Our feeding section focuses on what actually earns its place — from the £25 IKEA Antilop that outlasts £200 alternatives to the breast pump that suits your actual lifestyle, not the most-searched one.
Every recommendation is editorially independent. We earn a small commission on purchases through our links — but a bad recommendation earns us nothing, which is why we say clearly when the budget option beats the premium.
Starting
weaning?
Begin here.
Our first foods guide covers everything from the signs of readiness and first foods by age, to allergen introduction and the kit you’ll genuinely use. NHS-aligned, without pressure to buy equipment you don’t need.

