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The Complete Bugaboo Guide for Australian Parents

Discover the Bugaboo ecosystem - expert advice, helpful accessories, and their flagship products.

The Complete Bugaboo Guide for Australian Parents

If you've started researching prams, you've already met Bugaboo — the Dutch brand that practically invented the modern modular pram and has been refining it for more than 25 years. Bugaboo prams have a reputation in Australia for two things: they last, and they hold their value. But the range is bigger than most parents realise, and choosing the right one foryour family — your car, your front steps, your suburb, your plans — takes a little orientation.

This is our complete guide to Bugaboo prams in Australia. We've split it into seven short chapters, so you can read it end-to-end or jump to the bit you need. By the time you finish, you'll know which Bugaboo fits your life, which capsule clicks into it, what to add on, and how to keep it running well for the next four years (and the next baby, if there is one).

We're Baby Village — an authorised Bugaboo retailer with showrooms in Alexandria and Miranda where you can test-push every current model. If you'd rather chat to a person, our team is here. If you'd rather read first, let's dive in.

Why Bugaboo?

Bugaboo is worth the price for parents who want a pram that lasts through multiple children, holds its resale value, and is engineered to be repaired rather than replaced. It's a Certified B Corporation with a B Impact score of 84.7, made by an Amsterdam-based company that owns its own factory and has been refining its prams since 1999.

That's the short answer. The longer one is more interesting.

Dutch engineering, designed to be fixed

Bugaboo invented the modular pram in 1999, and most premium pram features you now take for granted — reversible seats, click-in bassinets, capsule travel systems — were either pioneered or popularised by them. Every chassis is engineered to outlast its first child. Wheels, fabrics, canopies, harnesses, even individual screws are sold as spare parts, so a worn liner doesn't write off an $1,800 pram. We have parents come into our showrooms with eight-year-old Bugaboos that still push like new because they've simply replaced a fabric set between babies.

A B Corp with a Push to Zero plan

Bugaboo earned B Corp certification in August 2023 — the first international stroller company to do so. They're committed to reaching net zero CO2 by 2035, and most current models are now made with mass-balanced bio-based materials that reduce the carbon footprint of an average stroller by up to 24%. The Butterfly 2 uses a recycled aluminium frame; the Kangaroo cut its production emissions by 16% compared with conventional materials; the Giraffe high chair is made from FSC-certified European beechwood. None of this affects how the pram pushes — but if sustainability is part of how you make decisions, it matters that you're not paying extra for greenwash.

For more on what the B Corp tick actually means, read our explainer on Bugaboo's B Corp certification.

Why this matters in Australia specifically

Australian footpaths are not a controlled environment. You're rolling over tree-root buckles in Bondi, cobbled laneways in the Rocks, sand at the beach, gravel on a hike, polished tile at a shopping centre. Bugaboo's all-terrain suspension is built for that variety in a way smaller wheels and harder tyres simply aren't. And because resale demand in Australia is high — search Gumtree on any given day — a well-cared-for Bugaboo recoups a meaningful chunk of its original cost when you're done with it. That's part of the real total cost of ownership, and it's what makes the upfront price more reasonable than the sticker first suggests.

→ Ready to start narrowing the range?
Find your Bugaboo

Find Your Bugaboo
Product Comparisons

The right Bugaboo for you depends on three things: where you'll push it most often (city, suburb, beach, plane), how many children you're shopping for, and whether you want one pram for everything or a primary plus a travel pram. Most Australian families end up with a Fox 5, a Dragonfly, a Butterfly 2, or a Donkey 5 — but a few quick questions will tell you which.

By Family Stage

  • First baby, planning for a second within 3 years: look hard at the Kangaroo— it converts from single to double without buying a second pram.
  • Twins on the way: the Donkey 5 in Twin configuration is the established side-by-side option that still fits through a standard Australian doorway.
  • Last baby: if you know this is your final newborn, the Dragonflyor Fox Cub gives you most of what a full Fox 5 offers at a slightly lower price and weight.
  • Adopting, fostering, or a non-newborn start: any of the prams above support children from 6 months up, often with a simpler setup since you can skip the bassinet stage.

By Car and Home

A few practical filters that matter more than the brochures admit:

  • Boot space: if you drive a sedan, the Butterfly 2, Dragonfly, or Fox Cub fold smaller than the Fox 5 or Donkey 5. Worth measuring your boot before you commit.
  • Apartment lift and storage: the Butterfly 2 stands folded at about the size of a cabin bag. The Donkey 5 in double mode is wider — you'll want to know it fits before the first lift ride.
  • House with steps: Fox 5 and Fox Cub have the suspension and wheel size to handle uneven thresholds and stair edges; the Butterfly 2 and Dragonfly are more at home on flat surfaces.

Putting it All Together

Use the matrix below and model intros in the next chapter to better understand the range of Bugaboo prams.

If you live in Sydney and are still unsure — bring your shoes, the car you'll be lifting it into, and the cup of coffee you've been having while researching, and visit our team in Alexandria or Miranda. Our expert consultants can tell you more in five minutes than a fortnight of reviews.

By Lifestyle

Your life looks like… The Bugaboo to start with
City living: lifts, cafés, public transport, the occasional flight Dragonfly or Butterfly 2
Suburban life: car-to-shop, prams in boots, footpaths and parks Fox Cub or Fox 5
Active and outdoorsy: beach walks, bush tracks, long pushes Fox Cub
Travel-heavy: regular flights, overhead lockers, light luggage Butterfly 2
Two under two, twins, or a growing family Kangaroo or Donkey 5
A primary plus a travel pram Butterfly 2

Want a deeper side-by-side breakdown?

Bugaboo Butterfly 2: The Ultra-Compact Travel Stroller That Does It All

Bugaboo Butterfly 2: The Ultra-Compact Travel Stroller That Does It All

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Bugaboo Fox 5 Pram: The best ride for babies across all-terrains

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The wait is finally over! Bugaboo has launched its latest pram, the Bugaboo Fox 5, and it's here to make your parenting journey smoother and more stylish than ever.

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Bugaboo Cameleon 3 Plus Pram Review

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The Models
Discover the Range

Bugaboo's current Australian lineup includes six prams (Fox 5, Fox Cub, Dragonfly, Butterfly 2, Kangaroo, Donkey 5), one travel cot (Stardust), and one high chair (Giraffe). Each is engineered for a slightly different parenting context. Here's a 150-word intro to each — click through to the buyer guide for the full review of any model that catches your eye.

Bugaboo Fox 5

The Fox 5 is Bugaboo's flagship all-terrain pram and our most-recommended starter for first-time Australian parents who want one pram for the whole four-year stretch. Suspension on all four wheels smooths out tree-root buckles and bumpy footpaths so your baby actually stays asleep, and the reversible seat means you can keep your newborn facing you, then turn them outward when they want to take in the world. Suitable from birth (with the included bassinet) to roughly 4 years (max. 22 kg seat weight). It includes Maxi-Cosi-style adapters in the box, so you can click in a Bugaboo Turtle Air capsule from day one without buying extras. At around 10 kg, it's the lightest full-size all-terrain Bugaboo.

Read the full Bugaboo Fox 5 buyer guide →

Bugaboo Fox Cub

The Fox Cub is the Fox 5's compact sibling — same all-terrain suspension and large wheel set, but in a slightly smaller, more affordable package. It's the Bugaboo we recommend when you love the way a Fox 5 pushes but drive a sedan, live in an apartment, or want to keep your spend closer to $1,400 than $1,900. Like its bigger sibling it carries from newborn (with bassinet) to around 4 years (max. 22 kg), the fabrics are machine-washable, and a two-wheel beach/snow mode lets you tilt the front wheels back for sand and soft ground. A genuine all-rounder with very few compromises for the everyday Australian family.

Read the full Bugaboo Fox Cub buyer guide →

Bugaboo Dragonfly

The Dragonfly is Bugaboo's city pram — designed for parents whose daily reality is cafés, lifts, light rail, and the occasional Uber. It one-handed folds into a self-standing package small enough to slide between bar stools, and the chassis is genuinely light to lift onto a tram or into a boot. It still takes a full bassinet for newborns and a Maxi-Cosi-compatible capsule (including the Bugaboo Turtle Air by Nuna), so it's a real first pram and not a top-up purchase. If your life is more pavement than park, the Dragonfly is the most refined city pram in the Bugaboo line.

Read the full Bugaboo Dragonfly buyer guide →

Link to these articles:

Bugaboo Fox 5 Review: Is It the Best Premium Pram in Australia 2026?
Bugaboo Dragonfly Review: The Compact City Pram Australian Parents Love
Bugaboo Butterfly Review: Best Compact Stroller for Travelling Families?
Bugaboo Donkey 5 Review: Worth It for Australian Twins in 2026?
Bugaboo Kangaroo Review: The All-In-One Newborn Pram for Australian Families
Bugaboo Cub Review: The Urban Stroller Grown-Ups Will Also Love
Bugaboo Stardust Review: Is This Australia's Best Luxury Travel Cot?
Bugaboo Giraffe Review: Is This Premium High Chair Worth the Price?

Model Buyer Guides

Bugaboo for Two

For twins or two-under-two, Bugaboo makes two distinct prams: the Donkey 5 (side-by-side, both children at equal height) and the Kangaroo (inline tandem with up to 20+ configurations). The Donkey 5 is the established choice for twins; the Kangaroo is the more flexible single-to-double for parents planning a second child later. Which you pick comes down to whether you're carrying two same-aged children or staggering a baby and an older sibling.

Donkey 5: side-by-side, equal height

The Donkey 5 sits both children alongside each other at the same height, which matters more than it sounds. Siblings can see each other, you can settle two children with one hand, and neither child is permanently "the back one." It opens in three core configurations:

  • Mono — one seat plus a side basket (single mode, ~60 cm wide)
  • Duo — one seat plus one bassinet (newborn plus older sibling)
  • Twin — two bassinets (newborn twins) or two seats (twin toddlers)

In double mode, the Donkey 5 is wider but still narrow enough to clear most Australian shopfront doors, supermarket aisles, and standard household doorways. You'll want to measure your lift if you live in an older apartment building, but a sedan boot will accommodate the folded chassis. The Donkey 5 is also future-proof: convert it back to a single when one child outgrows their seat, rather than buying a smaller pram.

Discover the Bugaboo Donkey range!

Kangaroo: inline tandem with options

The Kangaroo solves a different problem — the parent who's buying one pram for their first baby, but expects to have a second child within a few years. It starts as a single pram and adds a sibling seat below the main seat when the second child arrives, with the option to add a wheeled board for a third older child. Inline tandems take up less width than side-by-side prams, which is a real advantage in busy cafés and shopping centres.

Bundles that save the assembly

Both prams have bundle options that pair the chassis with the right configuration of seats, bassinets, adapters, and capsules — saving you the work of cross-referencing part numbers. Our Bugaboo Bundles collection is a good place to compare what's included before you build a kit piece by piece.

Travel Systems & Capsule Compatibility

Most current Bugaboo prams accept the Bugaboo Turtle Air by Nuna capsule using an included or sold-separately adapter, and the same adapter usually fits Maxi-Cosi Mico, Nuna Pipa Klik, and Cybex Cloud Q capsules. For air travel, the Butterfly 2 is the only Bugaboo engineered to meet IATA cabin baggage dimensions for overhead lockers. Here's how the system actually works in Australia.

Which capsule clicks into which pram

Bugaboo's in-house capsule is the Bugaboo Turtle by Nuna, made in partnership with Nuna. It's an ADR 34/02-approved Australian-spec infant capsule and clicks into a Bugaboo chassis via the Maxi-Cosi adapter that fits most current models — Fox 5, Fox Cub, Dragonfly, Kangaroo, and Donkey 5 included. The same adapter typically accepts these third-party capsules in Australia:

  • Maxi-Cosi Mico (6, 12, 12 LX)
  • Nuna Pipa Klik / Klik Plus
  • Cybex Cloud Q
  • Joie i-Gemm (Dragonfly)
  • Britax B-Pod (Dragonfly only)

A few important details:

  • Adapters are not interchangeable across all Bugaboo models. A Fox 5 adapter is not a Dragonfly adapter. Always confirm against the chassis you own.
  • The Fox 5 and Donkey 5 typically include the adapters in the box. The Dragonfly, Butterfly 2, and Kangaroo may require the adapter as a separate purchase — easy to add at checkout.
  • The Butterfly 2 does not take an infant capsule. It's a travel pram, not a newborn pram, and it's rated from 6 months.

For the full compatible range, browse our Bugaboo capsule systems collection.

Flying with a Bugaboo

For domestic and international flights, the Bugaboo Butterfly 2 is the pram engineered for it. It one-second-folds to a footprint roughly the size of a cabin bag and is IATA-compatible — the size standard most airlines reference. In practice, parents fly with the Butterfly on Qantas, Virgin Australia, and Jetstar without issue, but each airline applies its own discretion at the gate.

Qantas's published carry-on dimensions for cabin baggage are 56 × 36 × 23 cm at up to 7 kg in Economy — figures the Butterfly 2 sits comfortably within when folded. A couple of practical tips from parents we've flown out:

  1. Always check your specific flight before you fly. Some smaller regional aircraft (Dash 8s, ATRs) have stricter cabin storage rules — your pram may need to be gate-checked rather than carried on.
  2. A Bugaboo transport bag is worth the spend if you're checking it in. It protects the wheels and fabric from baggage handlers.
  3. Larger Bugaboos (Fox 5, Donkey 5) will be gate-checked or hold-stowed, not carried into the cabin. Allow a few extra minutes at the boarding gate.


For more on choosing a travel pram beyond Bugaboo, see our travel pram buying guide.

Accessories & Customisation

The accessories that make the biggest practical difference to daily Bugaboo life — in order of how often we recommend them — are: a rain cover, a cup holder, a footmuff, a quality bassinet liner, and a complete fabric colour pack. Most are model-specific, so always cross-check the part against your chassis before you buy. Here's what each one actually does for you.

The essentials

Rain cover. Sydney sun gives way to a Sydney downpour without warning. A model-specific Bugaboo rain cover seals the bassinet or seat in seconds and folds away to the size of a paperback. It is the one accessory we'd put in every Bugaboo box if we could.

Cup holder. A small thing that quietly fixes a hundred annoyances — the takeaway coffee, the water bottle on a hot day, the bottle of expressed milk you forgot was in your bag. The Bugaboo cup holder is made with recycled fishing nets as part of Bugaboo's sustainability commitments.

Footmuff. Australian winters are real, even in Sydney. A Bugaboo footmuff (universal-fit across most current chassis) zips around the seat and keeps your baby's legs and torso warm without the safety risks of loose blankets that can be kicked over the face.

Bassinet liner. The bassinet fabric is machine-washable, but a liner extends its life and adds a soft, breathable layer of cotton. Worth it if your baby spills milk, which is to say, worth it.

Customising the look

The Bugaboo colour fabric packs let you change the look of the canopy and seat fabrics in about 15 minutes — Forest Green, Desert Taupe, Midnight Black, Dark Cherry, and Moon Grey are common options across the current range. It's a nice middle path between buying a new pram for your second child and pushing around something faded.

Travel bag

If you're flying with a Bugaboo, the matching transport bag is worth the spend. It protects the wheels and fabric from baggage handlers and tucks under your pram's underseat basket when you're not using it.

What to skip

Not every accessory is a must. Snack trays are nice but not essential. Branded parasols are pretty but a good canopy with UPF 50+ does the same job. Toddler boards make sense if you've got a Donkey 5, Kangaroo, or Fox 5 and a second walking-age child; they're not essential otherwise.

For our full picks across the current range, see our best Bugaboo accessories article.

Life with Your Bugaboo

A Bugaboo is built to last through multiple children, and a small amount of regular maintenance is what unlocks that longevity: wipe-clean fabrics monthly, machine-wash the seat and bassinet covers seasonally, and lubricate the wheel axles every 6 months. Resale value in Australia stays strong — a well-cared-for Fox 5 or Donkey 5 typically resells for 50–60% of its original cost. Here's how to keep yours running well and what to do when you have a question we haven't answered.

Cleaning and maintenance

Every machine-washable Bugaboo fabric set (seat, bassinet, canopy) is rated for 30°C cold wash. Air-dry rather than tumble-dry to protect the elastics and UPF coatings. The chassis itself only needs a wipe-down with a damp cloth, and the leather-look handlebar grips should be cleaned with a soft cloth — never abrasive sprays.

Twice a year, give your wheels 30 seconds with a household lubricant on the axles. It's the single most effective thing you can do for the push quality of an older Bugaboo, and it costs nothing.

For a complete service routine, our Bugaboo care and maintenance articlewalks through every wear part.

Repairs and spares

This is where Bugaboo's design philosophy quietly pays off. Almost every component on a Bugaboo pram is replaceable — wheels, fabric sets, canopies, harnesses, brake pads, even individual screws. If a part fails after the warranty period, we can usually order it in for you and walk you through fitting it. That's the difference between a pram that lasts one baby and one that lasts three.

Resale value

Used Bugaboos are some of the most actively traded prams on Australian secondhand markets — a quick search of Gumtree or Facebook Marketplace will show you the going rate for any model. The combination of build quality, brand recognition, and the easy availability of fresh fabric sets is what makes resale so strong. If you keep yours clean, store it indoors between babies, and hang onto the original manuals and accessories, you'll be in a good position when you're ready to pass it on.

Test-push before you commit

The single best thing we can tell anyone researching a Bugaboo is to actually push one before you buy it. Bugaboos feel different to other prams — lighter than they look, smoother on rough surfaces — and a real test push is what tells you whether the model is right for your hands and your shoulder height. Our Alexandria and Miranda showroomshave every current model on the floor with a knowledgeable team who'll happily set up the side-by-sides without making you commit. We also offer click and collect through our Punchbowl pickup point if you've already decided.

Ready to choose?

You've now got the full picture: why Bugaboo earns its price, which model fits which life, how the capsule system actually works in Australia, and how to keep one running well past the first baby. Explore our range online or contact us for more assistance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a Bugaboo Pram worth it?
For a single-child family using the pram occasionally, a Bugaboo is a real investment that pays off most in build quality and resale value. For families planning two or more children, or who push their pram daily, Bugaboo's repairability, longevity, and resale demand make the per-year cost notably lower than the sticker price suggests. The Fox 5, Fox Cub, and Kangaroo are the models that most often justify themselves over four-plus years.
Where can I buy Bugaboo prams in Australia?
Bugaboo prams are sold in Australia through authorised retailers, including Baby Village. We stock the full current Bugaboo range across our Alexandria and Miranda showrooms in Sydney and ship Australia-wide from our Sydney warehouse, usually within one to two business days for in-stock items. Buying through an authorised retailer also activates Bugaboo's full Australian warranty.
Bugaboo vs UPPAbaby — which is better?
UPPAbaby and Bugaboo are the two most-compared premium prams in Australia, and both are genuinely excellent. UPPAbaby's Vista is the closest competitor to the Bugaboo Donkey 5 / Kangaroo (modular, single-to-double, capsule-compatible); Bugaboo's edge is in repairability, B Corp sustainability credentials, and a slightly smoother ride on rough surfaces. The honest answer is that the feel of each pram is different — a 10-minute push of both at a showroom will tell you more than any spec sheet.
Are Bugaboo prams good for newborns?
Yes. Every current Bugaboo pram (except the Butterfly 2, which is rated from 6 months) is suitable from birth, either with the included bassinet (Fox 5, Fox Cub, Dragonfly, Kangaroo, Donkey 5) or by clicking in a compatible newborn capsule like the Bugaboo Turtle Air by Nuna. Bassinets are the preferred newborn carriage option — they let your baby lie flat, which is better for early spine development than a reclined seat.
How long do Bugaboo prams last?
The chassis itself is engineered to outlast a single child by a comfortable margin. Most Bugaboo seats are rated to 22 kg (roughly age 4). With routine maintenance — fabric wash, axle lubrication, occasional part replacement — the same chassis will commonly serve a second and third child. The Butterfly 2 chassis is engineered for over 10,000 folds, around seven times the industry standard.
Can I take a Bugaboo on a plane?
The Bugaboo Butterfly 2 is the only Bugaboo engineered to meet airline cabin baggage dimensions, and it's been used in cabin on Qantas, Virgin Australia, and Jetstar regularly. Always check your specific airline and flight before flying. Larger Bugaboos (Fox 5, Donkey 5, Kangaroo, Dragonfly) will be gate-checked or stowed in the hold, not taken into the cabin. A Bugaboo transport bag protects the chassis if you're gate-checking.
Do Bugaboo prams come with a warranty in Australia?
Yes — all Bugaboo prams purchased through authorised Australian retailers (including Baby Village) come with a two-year manufacturer warranty, with an additional year free when you register your purchase on Bugaboo's website within 90 days. Always buy from an authorised retailer to ensure warranty coverage — grey-market or imported units typically aren't covered.

Visit Us In Store

Our team at Alexandria and Miranda has every current Bugaboo on the floor so we can help you find the perfect match! If a Bugaboo isn't right for your family — that's fine too. We're the village behind you either way.

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