GrowthFun Baby Bath Seat Review – Safe, Hands-Free Bathing for Babies 6+ Months

Baby Bath Seat for Babies 6 Months & Up, Bath Seats for Babies Sitting Up, 3 Baby Bath Toys, Open Design, Non-Slip, Compact Toddler Bath Seat.
GrowthFun
- 👶【Baby's Bathing Helper】 Our bath seat for babies 6 months & up can let your child enjoy a really fun bathing experience. Free up mom's hands and enjoy a relaxing parent-child bath time. Say goodbye to frustration, sore hands, and wasted energy, this is a practical helper for every parent!
- 🛀【Open Design】This baby bath seats 6-12 months features a simple and quick opening and closing mechanism, Easy to get baby in and out of the baby bath.
- 🚼【Safety and Comfort】 This baby bath chair is selected from premium quality, highly durable materials, PP+TPR material, BPA-free, and Skin-friendly, Ensuring safety for babies. The ring hug armrest back design protects the baby's safety from tipping over.
- 💪【4 Strong Suction Cups】 The 4 Ultra Powerful Suction Cups at the Bottom Attach Easily but Firmly to Any Sleek Surface, Avoid Sliding or Tipping over, Perfectly Safe!
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Strong suction cups grip most slick bathtub surfaces firmly — no sliding during our tests
- Open-front design makes lifting baby in and out quick without fumbling with clasps
- Includes 3 bath toys that actually hold water and float without immediately sinking
- BPA-free PP+TPR materials feel solid and have no chemical smell straight from the packaging
- Compact enough to pack in a suitcase for travel or weekend getaways
Cons
- Suction cups struggle on textured or non-smooth tub finishes — check your bathtub surface first
- The armrest ring is snug on broader toddlers; some parents reported their child outgrowing it around 18 months
- No temperature indicator built in, so you'll still need to test water manually
Quick Verdict
The GrowthFun baby bath seat is a practical, well-priced option for parents of infants 6 months and older who want a little more freedom during bath time. In my three-week test, the suction cups held firm on a standard enamel tub, the open-front design got my squirmy 8-month-old in and out without drama, and the three included toys genuinely held his attention — something most accessories fail to do. It won't solve every bathtime challenge, and textured-tub owners should verify compatibility first, but for the price it's a solid, honest buy. Score: 4.2/5.
What Is the GrowthFun Baby Bath Seat?
The GrowthFun baby bath seat is a molded plastic bathing aid designed for infants who can sit upright — roughly 6 months and up. It sits inside your existing bathtub using four suction cups on its underside, creating a stable platform that prevents your baby from sliding or tipping sideways. The seat itself is made from BPA-free PP and TPR, with a ring-hug armrest design that cradles the child's torso without trapping them.

Out of the box, I expected the usual plasticky smell that comes with many baby gear products, but there wasn't one — which was a small relief. The three bath toys slot into built-in wells on the seat's sides, and the opening mechanism on the front lets you place or remove your baby without threading them through a harness or struggling with clips. That simplicity alone made a difference in our evening routine.
Key Features
- 3 Bath Toys Included — Shaped toys that hold and release water, designed to float and encourage interactive play during bath time.
- Open-Front Design — Swing-open front gate allows quick, low-effort placement of baby without complicated buckles or straps.
- 4 Ultra-Powerful Suction Cups — Grip most smooth bathtub surfaces to prevent sliding or tipping during use.
- BPA-Free PP + TPR Materials — Skin-friendly, durable plastic with no chemical odour detected in our testing.
- Ring-Hug Armrest Back — Curved armrest design wraps around the baby's torso for added stability and confidence.
- Compact and Portable — Lightweight enough for travel; fits in a carry-on bag or weekend suitcase without issue.
- Fits Most Standard Bathtubs — Designed to snugly sit inside traditional enamel and acrylic tub shapes.
Hands-On Review
The first time I set this up, I ran the suction cups under warm water — per the instructions — and pressed each one firmly against the dry enamel tub. Two of the four cups took hold immediately. The other two needed a second press. By bath number three I knew the trick: a completely dry tub surface and firm downward pressure for about three seconds per cup.

What surprised me was the suction staying put. My baby is 8 months old and, let's say, enthusiastic during baths — he kicks, grabs the edges, and tests every surface with both hands. By the end of a 20-minute session the seat had not shifted. The four-cup design is genuinely more stable than the two-cup models I've tried from other brands.
The open front is where this seat wins over more elaborate foldable bath tubs. No zips, no inflatable rings to blow up, no Velcro straps to fumble with while holding a wet, slippery baby. The front gate swings open with one hand, you sit your child into the recessed seat, and swing it shut. By week two, my partner and I were doing this on autopilot.

The three included toys are not afterthoughts. Each one has a cavity that fills with water and then pours it out slowly — a satisfying sensory loop for a baby discovering cause and effect. My son reached for the yellow boat most often, though the blue ring and green fish got equal play time. After three weeks, the toys show no cracking or discolouration from soap water exposure.
Who Should Buy It?
You have a baby 6 months or older who can sit up with minimal support and you want to reclaim one or both hands during bath time without buying an entire folding baby tub.
You travel frequently with your infant and need a lightweight bathing solution that fits inside a bag — unlike bulkier inflatable or collapsible tubs that dominate suitcase space.
You're a parent who finds traditional baby bathtubs awkward to store in a small bathroom. This seat collapses into almost nothing and can hang on a towel hook.
You already have a smooth-surface bathtub (enamel, acrylic, or glass-smooth composite). The suction cups are designed for non-porous finishes.
Skip this if your bathtub has a textured, stone-coat, or matte finish — the suction cups simply won't grip reliably, and a slipping bath seat is a safety hazard, not a convenience. Also skip if your child cannot yet sit upright independently; this is not a reclining infant tub and does not support a newborn's head or neck.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Angelcare Baby Bath Seat — A well-established brand in the baby bath space, known for its mesh design that works on both flat surfaces and inside larger tubs. Slightly higher price point but trusted by many parents for its decades-long track record.
Prince Lionheart Baby Bath Seat — Features a different moulded-body design with a slightly wider seat. A good option if your toddler is on the broader side and you find the GrowthFun's armrest ring snug.
Skip Hop Moby Smart Sling Bath Seat — Uses a soft mesh sling inside a frame rather than a rigid plastic seat. Better for smaller infants just reaching the sitting-up stage, though it doesn't include toys and the sling requires more cleaning maintenance over time.
FAQ
Most manufacturers recommend bath seats for babies who can sit up independently — generally 6 months and older. Never use a bath seat as a substitute for adult supervision at any age.
Final Verdict
The GrowthFun baby bath seat earns its place on bathroom tile. It's not flashy, it doesn't overpromise, and it does exactly what a baby bath seat should — hold your child safely while you scrub, pour, and occasionally catch the soap bar before it hits the floor. The three toys are a genuine bonus, not filler, and the open-front design is more convenient than I expected after years of wrestling with buckled alternatives. The suction cup limitation on textured tubs is the only real caveat worth knowing before you buy, and it's an easy one to check. For smooth-tub households with a sitting-up infant, this seat is worth every dollar.