logo
Expecting? Here's when major baby gear prices are going up—and how to save before they do

Expecting? Here's when major baby gear prices are going up—and how to save before they do

Yahoo19-05-2025

Let's be real: having a baby has never been cheap, but right now feels especially brutal for expectant parents. Between the everyday costs of raising a child and the new tariffs that have hit baby gear hard, strollers that used to cost $899 are now jumping to $1,200. And car seats? They're seeing average price increases of around 20%, while strollers are up about 25%.
More than 70% of baby gear sold in the U.S. is manufactured in China, which means virtually every car seat, stroller, bassinet, and changing table is now subject to baby gear tariffs as high as 145%. The result? Industry experts are warning of overall price markups of about 30% across baby essentials, and that's just the beginning. (Because surprise! Tariffs are paid by the consumer, despite arguments to the contrary.)
Here's the thing though: you're not powerless in this situation. (Frustrated? Sure.) With some smart planning, strategic shopping, and a few creative alternatives, you can still get the gear your baby needs without breaking the bank.
If you're hoping to beat the price increases, here's your timeline based on Albee Baby's tracking of brand announcements. Some brands have already raised prices, while others are still giving you a small window to shop at current rates:
Already increased:
Chicco: March 10, 2025
Doona: April 22, 2025
Valco: April 30, 2025
Britax: May 1, 2025
BOB: May 1, 2025
Silver Cross: May 1, 2025
Clek: May 1, 2025
Romer: May 1, 2025
Cybex: May 1, 2025
Larktale: May 1, 2025
Veer: May 1, 2025
WAYB: May 1, 2025
UPPAbaby: May 5, 2025
Bumbleride: May 5, 2025
Baby Jogger: May 11, 2025
Graco: May 11, 2025
Still time to buy at current prices:
Bugaboo: May 20, 2025
Joolz: May 20, 2025
Maxi-Cosi: May 28, 2025
Tiny Love: May 28, 2025
Thule: June 2, 2025
Stokke: June 16, 2025
Focus on safety essentials first. Car seats, cribs, and strollers should be your priority since these are legally required or safety-critical items. If you know what you want, shop soon to avoid the next round of price increases.
Consider timing with new safety standards. Starting June 30, 2025, all newly manufactured car seats must meet enhanced side-impact protection standards (FMVSS 213a). Here's what this means for your shopping:
Car seats made before June 30 are still completely safe and legal to buy and use
If you're fine with current safety standards and want to save money, consider buying before June 30 (Mind you, current standards are very rigorous!)
After June 30, you'll mainly find seats that meet the new standards on store shelves
These newer seats will likely cost more due to redesign costs plus ongoing tariffs
Check expiration dates. If you're buying early and storing a car seat, make sure the expiration won't arrive before your child outgrows it. Most car seats expire 6-10 years from manufacture date.
Look for warehouse club deals. Watch for retailer discounts or club deals at warehouses like Costco and Sam's Club before prices jump.
Consider U.S.-made alternatives. Try to buy products made in the United States if possible. Even these products may increase in price if manufacturers use raw goods or components manufactured in other countries, but the increases should be less than what you would pay for items fully manufactured outside of the United States.
With new prices skyrocketing, buying used might seem tempting—and it can be a smart choice for certain items. But safety comes first, especially with gear that protects your child.
What's generally safe to buy used:
Clothes and blankets
Toys (check for recalls first)
Books
Baby carriers (inspect thoroughly for wear)
High chairs (check for recalls and missing parts)
Non-motorized swings and bouncers
What to approach with caution:
Car seats: Safety-focused gear like child car seats could be risky, as the item may have been previously recalled, have updated safety standards, or have structural problems that may make it no longer safe to use. Car seats also expire and you can't verify their crash history.
Cribs and crib mattresses: Safety standards change frequently, and older models may have been recalled
Strollers: Check for recalls and structural integrity
If you must buy safety gear used: Always check cpsc.gov/recalls to be sure it hasn't been recalled. Calling the manufacturer's customer service line is another good bet if you need replacement parts, instructions, or labels.
Red flags when buying used:
Missing labels or model numbers
Any visible damage or excessive wear
Seller can't provide manufacture date
Missing parts or instruction manual
'Too good to be true' pricing
Renting baby gear can help lighten the load when traveling with kids, but it's also becoming a viable option for everyday use, especially with prices soaring.
When renting makes sense:
You're unsure about a big purchase
You need gear temporarily (like for travel)
You want to try before you buy
Storage space is limited
Budget is tight right now
What you can rent: You can rent almost any type of baby gear, including bassinets, cribs, strollers, play yards, car seats, high chairs, toys, and bouncers. You can even find seasonal and specialty rentals like beach tents and outdoor blankets.
Top rental services:
: Over 450 independent quality providers in hundreds of cities across the U.S. and Canada. Insurance is included with every rental and they remove any recalled items immediately from the site.
: Been helping families for 20 years with delivery to hotels, Airbnbs, and homes
: Over 90 locations throughout the USA with over 25 years of experience
: Network of 500+ local providers ready to deliver baby gear globally
What to look for in a rental service: Check out reviews that other parents have left, especially making sure that the rented items arrived on time and in good condition. Check the company's website for delivery fees, cleaning costs, service charges, or other fees that can add up.
Local alternatives:
Facebook Marketplace and local parent groups often have rental options
Some children's stores offer rental programs
Baby gear libraries in select cities
The reality is that rising costs are putting pressure on families at one of the most expensive times in their lives. A 2025 survey from BabyCenter reported that raising a child in the U.S. today costs families upward of $20,000 in the first year alone, with 37% of expecting parents worried about finances and 25% saying they had decided to have fewer children because of the high cost.
Nearly 50 members of Congress have issued a statement opposing price increases on essential baby gear and asking Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to work with the Trump administration on an exemption from tariffs for this lifesaving category. While we wait to see if policy changes bring relief, focus on what you can control.
Remember: you don't need everything at once. Start with the absolute essentials—a safe place for baby to sleep, a car seat to get home from the hospital, and basic feeding supplies. Everything else can wait or be acquired gradually. And there's no shame in asking for help, whether that's adding items to your registry, accepting hand-me-downs from friends, or renting gear short-term.
Your baby won't care if their stroller cost $200 or $800. What matters is that they're safe, loved, and have what they need. Sometimes in the face of challenging circumstances, that's the most important reminder of all.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jim Chanos Sees Big Short in Saylor's Strategy, But Others Aren't So Sure
Jim Chanos Sees Big Short in Saylor's Strategy, But Others Aren't So Sure

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jim Chanos Sees Big Short in Saylor's Strategy, But Others Aren't So Sure

(Bloomberg) -- Buy Bitcoin, short Michael Saylor's Strategy. That's the latest call from legendary short-seller Jim Chanos, who sees the arbitrage play as a no-brainer. Others aren't so sure. ICE Moves to DNA-Test Families Targeted for Deportation with New Contract Next Stop: Rancho Cucamonga! The Global Struggle to Build Safer Cars US Housing Agency Vulnerable to Fraud After DOGE Cuts, Documents Warn NYC Residents Want Safer Streets, Cheaper Housing, Survey Says The trade has long been on the radar of Wall Street hedge funds, drawn to the premium Strategy's shares enjoy relative to the value of the company's Bitcoin holdings — a gap that topped 200% last year. The discrepancy stems from Saylor's self-styled Bitcoin treasury strategy, through which he has tapped capital markets to buy more and more of the world's biggest cryptocurrency, in turn attracting billions of dollars from retail investors. In the eyes of many arbitrage specialists, the yawning spread is unsustainable — in fact, it's already begun to narrow, but they see further opportunity to profit. 'I haven't seen an arbitrage like this in this size in years, years and years,' Chanos said during a recent interview on the Risk and Return podcast, referencing the trade he disclosed on CNBC in early May. It's one of a series of sophisticated trading strategies around the complex capital structure of Saylor's firm, formerly known as MicroStrategy, and the growing ecosystem of crypto investment vehicles. Some market players see parallels to the once-popular 'widow-maker' pair trade involving Bitcoin and the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, but with fewer constraints. There are still risks involved, though. Chanos, known for his prescient bet against Enron Corp. 20 years ago, emphasized that his current favored trade isn't a wager against Bitcoin or Strategy, but rather a mirror of Saylor's own playbook: selling equity and raising capital to buy more digital assets. The core opportunity, he said, lies in the divergence between Strategy's market price and the company's Bitcoin-adjusted book value. 'The fact of the matter is, this is a Bitcoin holding company,' Chanos said on the podcast explaining the premium dislocation. Buying Strategy shares at their current price of around $400, he said, is effectively equivalent to buying Bitcoin at about two times its value — 'paying around $220,000 for Bitcoin that trades at $110,000. But the company is doing everything it can to close that spread, which is great — there's a catalyst.' A growing number of copycats have also started pursuing similar crypto-treasury strategies, further shifting supply-demand dynamics, Chanos added on the podcast. The investor didn't respond to a request for comment, nor did representatives for Strategy. On a basic level, the premium as measured by Strategy's market capitalization relative to its Bitcoin holding value stands at 70%, according to Bloomberg calculations. Taken a step further — adding in other dilutive securities the company has employed in its massive capital raising in the last year and removing the value of Strategy's legacy software business — and investors are paying a premium for the stock that's nearly double the value of the firm's Bitcoin holdings. If Bitcoin rises but Strategy's premium compresses — or if share dilution outpaces gains— Chanos' trade would turn a profit. Yet like any arbitrage, the spread may widen before it narrows, as seen in the GBTC trade around 2021. Premium Warranted? Some analysts and retail believers argue that a substantial premium in Saylor's firm is warranted, placing it in a unique category. First of all, Strategy offers investors exposure to a zero-fee Bitcoin vehicle, offering an edge over comparable exchange-traded funds. What's more, the company demonstrated an ability to use leverage to grow Bitcoin per share over time, an added value for investors buying the stock instead of the ETFs or underlying crypto, according to TD Cowen analyst Lance Vitanza, who believes Strategy's Bitcoin per share will increase by 26% this year. 'I expect MSTR will trade around its recent historical premium, either side of 100%, for the foreseeable future,' he said, referring to Strategy's ticker. Timing — when to enter and exit the wager— remains a key variable around returns, given the spread's ongoing volatility. In March 2024, Kerrisdale Capital Management promoted a similar pair trade in a letter titled 'Know When to HODL, Know When to FODL,' in a nod to crypto lingo. The firm still stands by its thesis, but 'I don't have the trade on now,' said founder Sahm Adrangi. 'When we put out the report, the premium was much higher and it made sense at that point. Is it going to zero? I don't really know,' he said, declining to specify when the firm closed the position. To Chanos and other fans of the trade, Strategy's ample market capitalization — now over $100 billion — and deep float make it relatively easy to maintain the short leg. For hedge funds, new borrows are being priced at a fee of 0.3 percentage point, according to data from S3 Partners. This helps to keep the cost of carry manageable while waiting for the spread to narrow. The inexpensive terms are likely to persist, given the stock's roughly 250 million free floating shares, and that only 11% is currently sold short, said Sam Pierson, director of research at the firm. But that doesn't eliminate the risk that the borrowing dynamics could change — potentially becoming more expensive and less stable, especially for individual investors, said Victor Haghani, chief investment officer of Elm Wealth and founding partner of Long Term Capital Management. There's a lot of demand for borrowing shares related to convertible arbitrage wagers and leveraged short ETFs, he added. Another source of uncertainty is the potential for an unexpected corporate event, such as a merger that might shift the company's fundamental business, complicating premium estimates and muddying the existing trade. 'Say if all of a sudden Strategy is part of something that is twice as big — then when you try to look at the valuation relative to the Bitcoin it holds, you can't really say that much anymore because now there's a business with revenues,' Haghani said. Still, he is confident of the spread's long-term convergence. 'My expectation is that in four or five years at the longest, the premium will be zero or even negative,'he said. 'I think this is a good trade, a good one possibly for hedge funds, but it's not one I'd want to put on in my personal account for the risks involved and my disadvantaged position relative to hedge funds in running the trade.' --With assistance from Tom Contiliano. Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It's Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Is Elon Musk's Political Capital Spent? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Vista CEO: AI Will Replace 60% of Bankers
Vista CEO: AI Will Replace 60% of Bankers

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Vista CEO: AI Will Replace 60% of Bankers

Vista Partners CEO Robert Smith is warning from the Berlin SuperReturn Conference that "40% of the people at this conference will have an AI agent and the remaining 60% will be looking for work." Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Banking Analyst Tomasz Noetzel joined Wall Street Beat on Bloomberg Open Interest to talk about his report that shows Wall Street job losses could top two hundred thousand in the age of AI. Sign in to access your portfolio

Arsenal need goals and see Igor Paixão as an affordable alternative
Arsenal need goals and see Igor Paixão as an affordable alternative

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Arsenal need goals and see Igor Paixão as an affordable alternative

Arsenal need goals and see Igor Paixão as an affordable alternative Arsenal have added Igor Paixão to their list of potential transfer targets for this summer, The Times reports. The Feyenoord winger is said to be an alternative to the 'expensive' Nico Williams and Leroy Sané. According to the English paper, Mikel Arteta has prioritised strengthening his attack after Arsenal were forced to settle for a third consecutive second-place finish in the Premier League. The team scored 69 goals, 22 fewer than the previous season. Advertisement Paixão joins Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers on the Gunners' wishlist. Rogers seems to have a slight advantage over Paixão. 'Arteta likes versatile players and prefers to sign players with Premier League experience. The 24-year-old Paixão would be a cheaper option than Rogers.' Paixão has been under contract with Feyenoord since the summer of 2022. In Rotterdam-Zuid, the Brazilian has made 129 appearances so far, in which he has scored 39 goals and provided 29 assists. With this, Paixão has caught the attention of clubs from Europe. Olympique Marseille are said to have offered around 20 million euros, although Feyenoord were quick to turn that down. GBeNeFN | Max Bradfield

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store