Complete Baby Registry Checklist for UK First-Time Parents
The honest checklist of what UK first-time parents actually need. No fluff, no unnecessary gadgets – just the essentials plus a few nice-to-haves.
The Registry Reality Check
Building your first baby registry is a bit like being dropped into a foreign country where everything has weird names and costs three times what you expected. Snuza? Sleepyhead? Why are there 47 different types of bottles?
Don't panic. We've created this checklist based on what UK parents actually use (not what Instagram influencers tell you to buy). Some items are essential from day one, others can wait, and some you might not need at all. We'll be honest about all of it.
The Absolute Essentials
These are the things you genuinely cannot bring baby home without. Everything else is negotiable.
Safe Sleep
- Moses basket or crib: For the first few months. Many parents use a Next2Me style bedside crib.
- Firm mattress: Must be new and fit snugly with no gaps.
- Fitted sheets (x3-4): You'll go through these faster than you think.
- Sleeping bags: Safer than blankets. Get 1.0 tog for most of the year, 2.5 tog for winter.
Budget: £150-400 depending on whether you go Moses basket or bedside crib
Getting Around
- Car seat (Group 0+): Non-negotiable. The hospital won't let you leave without one.
- Pushchair or travel system: See our complete pushchair guide for recommendations.
- Raincover: This is the UK. You will need this.
Budget: £200-1,200+ depending on your choices
Feeding
- If breastfeeding: Nursing bras (x3), breast pads, nipple cream, muslins
- If bottle feeding: Bottles (x6-8), formula, bottle brush, steriliser
- Either way: Burp cloths/muslins (you can never have too many)
Budget: £50-200 depending on feeding method
Nappy Changing
- Nappies: Newborn size AND size 1 (babies grow fast)
- Wipes: Water wipes are gentlest for newborns
- Changing mat: Doesn't need to be fancy
- Nappy cream: Sudocrem or similar for when needed
- Nappy bags: For containing the horror
Budget: £30-50 initial stock, then ongoing
The "You'll Want These Pretty Quickly" List
Not strictly essential for day one, but you'll probably want them within the first few weeks.
Baby Monitor
Audio is fine for small homes, video gives peace of mind. Don't go overboard with features you won't use.
Baby Carrier or Sling
Hands-free baby holding is a game-changer. Try before you buy if possible – fit matters.
Bouncer or Swing
Somewhere safe to put baby down while you eat/shower/exist. Some babies love them, some hate them.
Changing Bag
Backpack style is popular for good reason. Make sure it has a changing mat included.
Play Mat
For tummy time and general floor play. Doesn't need to be expensive – babies don't care about brands.
Baby Bath or Support
A bath support for your regular bath works just as well as a separate baby bath and takes up less space.
Clothing: What You Actually Need
Babies grow ridiculously fast. Don't go overboard on newborn sizes – many babies skip them entirely.
The Realistic Clothing List
- Bodysuits/vests (x7-8): The foundation of every outfit. Get a mix of newborn and 0-3 months.
- Sleepsuits (x7-8): Babies basically live in these for the first few months.
- Cardigans (x2-3): Easy to add/remove for temperature regulation.
- Hat: Babies lose heat through their heads. One warm one, one sun hat for summer babies.
- Scratch mittens: Those tiny fingernails are lethal.
- Socks (x5-6 pairs): They will lose these constantly. Buy cheap, buy many.
- Outdoor suit: Depending on season – snowsuit for winter, lighter layer for summer.
Pro tip: Ask for clothes in 3-6 month and 6-9 month sizes as gifts. You'll be drowning in newborn stuff but desperate for bigger sizes later.
The "Nice to Have" List
These aren't essential, but many parents find them useful:
- White noise machine: Some babies sleep better with background noise. Your phone can do this too.
- Nursing pillow: Helpful for feeding positioning, but regular pillows work fine.
- Baby gym: Good for development, but not urgent in the first weeks.
- Breast pump: If breastfeeding and planning to express. Can wait until you know you need it.
- Bottle warmer: Convenient but not essential – a jug of warm water works.
- Nappy bin: Helpful for containing smells, but regular bin bags work too.
What You Probably Don't Need
Marketing will try to convince you otherwise, but these are often unnecessary:
- Wipe warmer: Babies survive cold wipes. Promise.
- Shoes: Babies don't walk. Socks are fine.
- Expensive newborn outfits: They'll wear them once, spit up on them, and outgrow them.
- Baby food maker: A regular blender does the same job.
- Every gadget on the market: Wait and see what you actually need.
The Big Ticket Items
These are perfect for group gifting – expensive but essential:
| Item | Budget Range | When Needed |
|---|---|---|
| Pushchair/Travel System | £200-1,200 | From birth |
| Car Seat | £80-300 | From birth |
| Cot | £100-500 | From 4-6 months |
| Cot Mattress | £50-150 | With cot |
| High Chair | £30-300 | From 6 months |
Building Your Registry
Now you know what you need, here's how to build a registry that actually works:
- Mix price points: Include items from £10 to £500+ so everyone can contribute
- Enable group gifting: Let multiple people chip in for expensive items
- Add quantities: You need 8 bodysuits, not 1
- Include boring essentials: Nappies and wipes aren't exciting but they're useful
- Update as you go: Remove items you've bought yourself, add things you discover you need
Ready to build your registry?
Create your BubsNest registry and start adding items. Compare prices across UK retailers and enable group gifting for the big stuff.
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