What to look for
Here is advice from the testers with disabilities on the features they
found helpful and others they found difficult to use. Before you buy,
check over highchairs in the shops for the features you can manage.
Child's comfort and security
Getting child in and out of chair
Safety straps
Trays
Chair height
Converting to and from a table and chair
Reclining seats
Folding and unfolding
Moving the chair
Child’s comfort and security
  
A comfortable chair (left), an uncomfortable chair (middle) and a possible
finger trap (right)
Parents cared a lot about how comfortable and safe their child would
be in the highchairs. This affected how much they liked a chair more than
anything else.
Look for:
- a seat that’s padded all around – for nestling
in but also so a child in a tantrum does not bang their head on a hard
seat back. You can buy padded inserts for around £15.
- high, rounded seat backs - thought comfortable and
safe, along with deep seats and closed sides for protection.
cloth seating or covers. Plastic seating is easy to wipe clean but children
might get sticky in hot weather.
- footrests, thought to be more comfortable for toddlers.
- fixed crotch straps to stop the baby sliding down while
the harness is being put on.
Think about:
- a few highchairs had a bar that stayed in place when
the tray was removed. High to lift the baby over, but some parents liked
the deterrent to a baby falling forward.
- tightening the harness waist strap so the child cannot
wriggle out or stand up.
- the highchair’s stability. Wheelchair users,
people with walking difficulties and visually impaired parents thought
they might knock over the lighter, narrower highchairs.
- more safety advice - go to How
to stay safe.
Child in and out
The space available to lift a baby into varied a lot between the different
highchairs. Check the width of the seat, the distance between the back
of the tray and the chair back and the space below the tray for chubby
legs.
Look for:
- an easily adjustable tray – pulling it out for
more space to get the child in, then pushing it inwards to confine the
child. See below for more on trays.
- clear space between the highchair’s arms. A child
has to be lifted over any supporting bar – difficult from a wheelchair
and not always seen by visually impaired parents.
- the right height chair for you – not too low
if you are tall nor too high, particularly if you use a wheelchair.
easy-to-adjust multi-position highchairs.
Think about:
- the layout of the legs and the position of any floor
bars, so they don’t get in the way of your wheelchair and its
footplate.
- your growing child: will there
be space for a hefty toddler and for your hands to deal with the safety
straps?
Safety straps
 
Difficult straps to do up (left), easier straps to undo (right)
The DPPi (Helpful organisations)
tells us that safety harnesses are a continuous source of difficulty for
many disabled parents. Our user trials confirmed this, so try them out
before buying: you cannot take the risk of not strapping in your child.
The disabled testers found 3-point harnesses generally easier to handle
than 5-point – simply having fewer straps to deal with. Threading
the waist strap through the crotch strap was difficult for some though,
particularly people with no sight. In fact our safety expert advises that
close-fitting straps around the child’s middle are the most effective
part of a harness, stopping him or her wriggling out or standing up.
Look for:
- a safety harness you can manage. Adjust the waist straps
to fit snuggly and your child will be just as safe in a 3-point harness.
- a clasp that is not small and stiff and therefore
harder to use, particularly if you have impaired dexterity.
- a clasp that closes positively with a click, so you
know the fastening is secure without having to see it.
- contrasting colours between the clasp and straps -
easier to see, but not many harnesses have them. good quality webbing
straps that will not fray or get floppy to handle.
Think about:
- the hand movements you can manage best: squeezing
and pushing in a plastic prong type clasp or pressing down raised flanges
to slide them in.
- having your child wear a British Standard safety harness
most of the day, ready to be clipped into their highchair or pushchair.
This has waist and shoulder straps and fixing clips, is easy to buy
separately and is washable.
Trays
 
Easy to adjust (left), replacing flip over tray (right)
A good size tray is worthwhile if your child is going to play with toys
in the highchair as well as eat in it. But a large tray will take up room
and may be cumbersome and heavy to adjust, remove and replace. It will
certainly be easier to get the baby in and strapped in with no tray in
place.
Look for:
- a fixed or flip-over tray if your grip is too weak
and painful to adjust and remove trays. Bear in mind the flip-over trays
still had clips to hold them in place.
- an adjustment and removal mechanism you can deal with.
These were under the tray and involved pulling up two tabs (liked by
most testers) or pulling on a finger grip (liked by some) or simultaneously
pressing a button and pulling a lever
(liked least).
 
Removing tray with one hand (left), fiddly tray to replace (right)
Think about:
- replacing the trays means locating catches or runners
and lining up both sides accurately, requiring a steady grip.
- some trays had to be pushed and pulled quite hard
to start them moving. Some came out completely when parents meant to
adjust them.
Chair height

If you are tall, short, need to sit to feed the baby or use a wheelchair,
or if people of different heights feed your child, consider a multi-position
highchair. Models which have to be rebuilt with tools are not suitable
for a multi-height family and the press-button types vary in how easy
they are to adjust.
Look for:
- a height adjustment mechanism that you can manage.
A central control is likely to be easier than reaching and operating
buttons on either side of the chair, particularly from a wheelchair.
- chair weight that is not too heavy to lift, lower
and control.
Converting to and from a table and chair

Almost all the disabled testers needed two hands to change the convertible
highchairs to and from a low table and chair. Each way the chairs have
to be lifted high to clear the table section. Some of the wheelchair users
could not manage the weight and leverage necessary.
Think about:
- To restack the highchairs, the seat has to be dropped
down exactly square on to the upturned table, aligning the four legs
all at once. This proved difficult for visually impaired people, those
with poor grip and wheelchair users.
Reclining seats

Highchairs with adjustable seat backs can mostly be used with babies
under six months, before they can sit without help – but check the
manufacturers’ age ranges in the individual product summaries. Three
of the highchairs we tested had this feature: Chicco
Mamma, Cosatto Aurora and Jané
Activa.
Think about:
- all had the reclining control on the centre of the
chair back: a dial on the Activa (above) and pull-up catches on the
other two chairs. All were a reasonable size and most testers could
use them one-handed, but some people with weak fingers found them stiff
to adjust.
Folding and unfolding

Disabled testers criticised many of the highchairs as being complicated
to fold and unfold, having too much to do with different hands or needing
some force. The easiest (the Jonelle
Contented Cat) folded like a deckchair, and most testers managed it
one-handed.
Look for:
- highchairs that stay stable during folding.
- catches that lock into place with a positive click.
- safety clips in a contrasting colour – easier
to see.
Think about:
- the weight of the highchair and the width between
catches: these caused particular problems for wheelchair users as well
as getting in close to do the folding.
- the space in your home: will you need to fold the
highchair much? Some fold slimmer than others: you could take them on
your travels.
- most of the folding chairs had to be leant against
a wall. Parents said they would do the same with the couple that stood
upright, in case of knocking over by or on to their child.
Moving the chair
  
Wheeling a highchair from wheels (left), easy locking (middle), not so
easy locking (right)
Wheels help if your child spends time playing in the highchair as well
as being pulled up to the table at mealtimes. Just two of the highchairs
on test had wheels: the Chicco Mamma and
Cosatto Aurora. Both had tabs on the rear
wheels, to lower to lock the wheels and lift to unlock them. Parents with
walking difficulties found it slightly harder to lock and unlock wheels
than other testers.
Cosatto tell us they no longer make the Aurora with wheels. The Mamma
locks were easier to use and see (red against its navy blue wheels).
Moving the highchairs without wheels varied - according to their size,
weight, gripping points, how much they wobbled and whether they slid smoothly
or juddered along.
Report Contents
About
this guide
Types
What
to look for
Favourite
features
Suiting
your own abilities
How
to stay safe
Buying
guide
Standard highchairs
Multiposition highchairs
Convertible highchairs
More
highchairs on the market
Helpful
organisations
Suppliers'
details
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