Stokke Tripp Trapp vs IKEA Antilop — Which High Chair Is Worth It? | Modern Parenting UK
Modern ParentingFeedingStokke vs IKEA

Stokke Tripp Trapp vs IKEA Antilop.
£295 vs £25.

The two most recommended high chairs in the UK sit at opposite ends of the price spectrum. One costs twelve times more than the other. This comparison explains exactly what you get for the difference — and who should buy which.

High Chair Comparison · Updated May 2026 · Both Tested

Both chairs were used by the Modern Parenting team over extended periods. The Stokke Tripp Trapp was tested from 6 months to 4 years with the Newborn Set and Baby Set; the IKEA Antilop from 6 months to 18 months. Scores are from our high chairs buying guide. Prices correct as of May 2026.

At a glance

Stokke Tripp TrappFrom £295 (chair only) · Up to £430 with accessories
VS
IKEA Antilop£25 with tray · £15 without
9.5 / 10
Score
8.6 / 10
Birth to adulthood (with accessories)
Age range
6 months to ~3 years
Fully adjustable height and depth
Adjustability
None — fixed position
Wood, Tripp Trapp harness, Baby Set — multiple parts
Cleaning
Wipes clean in 30 seconds, dishwasher-safe tray
Beechwood, lifetime guarantee
Build
Polypropylene — robust for the price
Excellent — resale value of £100–150
Value
Good — lowest cost-per-use of any chair
Yes — 7kg without accessories
Portable
Yes — lightweight, fits in a bag
Any table — grows with the chair
Table use
Requires own tray — not suitable for all tables

Design, build quality and ergonomics

Stokke Tripp TrappFrom £295

Solid European beechwood, noticeably heavy and satisfyingly rigid. The footrest and seat board slot into the chair’s uprights and can be repositioned as the child grows — this is the Tripp Trapp’s defining feature. The seat and footrest always adjust to maintain the 90-90-90 posture (hips, knees, ankles all at 90°) which ergonomic experts recommend for comfortable, distraction-free eating. In the Baby Set configuration (additional £80), it has a high backrest and removable harness suitable from 6 months. The Newborn Set (additional £70) extends use from birth.

IKEA Antilop£25 with tray

Moulded polypropylene shell with steel legs. Feels lighter and less substantial than the Tripp Trapp, but is genuinely robust — it doesn’t flex or rattle and handles toddler abuse well. The fixed-position seat cannot be adjusted, which means younger babies may slump slightly forward and older toddlers find their feet dangling — both small issues that don’t affect safety but do affect comfort over long meals. No footrest to speak of. The separate tray snaps on and off very easily. Not suitable from birth — this is a 6-month-plus chair only.

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On the 90-90-90 posture: research from occupational therapists working with children consistently shows that having feet supported and hips at a right angle improves core engagement during eating, reduces fidgeting and leads to better mealtime focus. The Tripp Trapp’s adjustable footrest maintains this as the child grows; the Antilop does not have a footrest, which matters more from around 18 months onward when toddlers eat longer meals and benefit from a stable seated position.

Ease of cleaning

This is the clearest advantage the Antilop has over the Tripp Trapp — and it is not a small one. Anyone who has cleaned a high chair daily for two years will understand why it matters.

Stokke Tripp TrappCleaning: 3–5 minutes

The wooden seat board and footrest wipe clean easily. The Baby Set (hard plastic backrest and sides) also wipes down without issue. The harness is the problem — it has multiple fabric straps that cannot be removed for washing in most configurations and food inevitably gets into the buckles. Stokke sells a separate harness for the older child configuration. The slot channels in the uprights where the seat board sits also trap food debris and require a brush or narrow cloth to clean properly. Not difficult, but noticeably more work than the Antilop.

IKEA AntilopCleaning: 30 seconds

Smooth, seamless plastic with nowhere for food to hide. The tray pops off in one click and is dishwasher-safe. The chair itself can be wiped down with a damp cloth in seconds or stood in the shower. There are no fabric parts, no straps, no crevices. This is the single most practical high chair to clean at any price point. At three meals a day for two years, this adds up to a significant real-world advantage.

Longevity and long-term value

This is where the Stokke’s price premium starts to make more sense — but only if you actually use it for the long term.

The Tripp Trapp’s case

With the Newborn Set, the Tripp Trapp can be used from birth. The Baby Set takes over from around 6 months. The chair itself — without any accessories — can be used from roughly 3 years old as a standard chair at any table, and remains suitable through childhood and into adulthood. Stokke offers a lifetime guarantee on the chair itself. Second-hand Tripp Trapps consistently sell for £100–150 on Facebook Marketplace, making the effective long-term cost considerably lower than the sticker price. If you plan to use it across multiple children, the per-child cost drops significantly.

The Antilop’s case

At £25, the Antilop is almost impossible to beat on absolute cost. It is usable from 6 months to approximately 3 years, which covers the period when a high chair is most needed. After that, it is not suitable as a chair at the table. At £25, replacing it rather than reselling it is not a financial issue. For a first child where budget is tight, or as a second chair for grandparents’ houses or travel, the Antilop is the rational choice without question.

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The real cost comparison: Tripp Trapp chair (£295) + Baby Set (£80) = £375. Minus second-hand resale value (£130 average) = £245 effective cost. IKEA Antilop = £25. The gap is £220 over the chair’s useful life — roughly £110 per year across a two-year main use period. Whether that premium is worth it comes down to kitchen space, cleaning tolerance, aesthetics and whether you’ll have more children.

Who should buy which

Buy the Stokke Tripp Trapp if:

You are planning to use it from 6 months through childhood, you eat at a table as a family and want the chair to join you without a separate tray, you prioritise ergonomics and adjustability, you value aesthetics and the chair will live in a visible part of your home, or you are planning more than one child and can spread the cost. The Tripp Trapp is genuinely one of the best-designed pieces of children’s furniture available — it earns its 9.5/10 score.

Buy the IKEA Antilop if:

Budget is a consideration at all, you have a small kitchen and want a chair that stores or travels easily, you prioritise minimal cleaning effort above everything else, you need a second chair for a relative’s house, or you are unsure how long your child will use a high chair and don’t want to commit to a significant purchase. The Antilop’s 8.6/10 reflects genuine quality for its price — it is not a compromise, it is a different set of priorities.

The verdict

The Tripp Trapp is better. The Antilop is the right choice for more families.

The Stokke Tripp Trapp is an exceptional product — adjustable, ergonomic, durable and genuinely beautiful. If budget is not a constraint and you plan to use it long-term, it is the best high chair available in the UK at any price. Its 9.5 score reflects a product that does everything well.

The IKEA Antilop is the most practical high chair for daily use. It cleans in 30 seconds, costs £25 and works well from 6 months to 3 years. For most UK families — particularly first-time parents who aren’t sure what their child’s eating patterns or temperament will look like — the Antilop is the sensible starting point. You can always buy a Tripp Trapp later. You can’t get back the hours spent scrubbing harness buckles.

If you’re weighing other options, see our complete high chair buying guide or try our high chair finder quiz for a direct recommendation based on your specific situation.

Frequently asked questions

Is the IKEA Antilop safe?+
Yes. The Antilop meets all relevant EU and UK safety standards. The included harness secures a baby safely from 6 months. Its simplicity is an asset — there are no complex mechanisms to fail. It has been the world’s best-selling high chair for years and has an excellent safety record.
Can I use the Tripp Trapp from birth?+
Yes, with the Newborn Set (sold separately, approximately £70). The Newborn Set creates a bouncer-style seat within the chair frame and is suitable from birth to approximately 9kg. From around 6 months (or when sitting supported), you transition to the Baby Set which provides the high back and harness for mealtimes.
Does the Antilop work for baby-led weaning?+
Very well. Its easy cleaning is arguably an advantage for BLW, where mess is significantly greater. The tray provides a good surface, and the upright seated position is appropriate for self-feeding. The lack of a footrest is a minor limitation from around 12 months when toddlers benefit from foot support during longer, more active meals.
Is the Tripp Trapp worth the money?+
Yes, if you use it fully. The chair earns back much of its cost through resale value — a well-maintained Tripp Trapp sells for £100–150 second-hand. Used from 6 months through early school age, and potentially across multiple children, the effective cost per year of use is much lower than the sticker price suggests.
Can I buy a second-hand Tripp Trapp?+
Yes, and it is often excellent value. Facebook Marketplace typically has listings at £80–150. The main thing to check is that the seat board and footrest adjustment rails are not cracked and that all bolts are present. Stokke sell individual spare parts, so minor damage is usually fixable. The lifetime guarantee transfers to new owners, though proof of original purchase may be required.
Testing note: Both chairs were used by the Modern Parenting editorial team over extended real-world periods. The Stokke Tripp Trapp was tested with Newborn Set and Baby Set from birth to 4 years; the IKEA Antilop from 6 months to 18 months. Stokke and IKEA had no involvement in this comparison. Prices verified May 2026. · Affiliate disclosure · Editorial policy