Ingenuity Ready Set Go Potty Training Toilet Review 2025

Ingenuity Ready Set Go Potty Training Toilet, Removable Bowl, Non-Skid Bottom, Wide Stable Base, Age 18 Months & Up, White & Grey
Ingenuity
- The sleek and simple design of this potty training toilet blends in perfectly with any bathroom décor
- This durable plastic toddler toilet makes sanitizing simple, so it’s ready for the next use when your little one needs it most
- With plenty of height, the raised splash guard will help boys keep their business where it’s supposed to be – right in the potty
- Cleanup is a breeze thanks to an easy-to-remove pot, letting you dispose of waste sanitarily
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Removable bowl makes disposal fast and sanitary — no contact with waste
Cons
- Splash guard is fairly short; some boys still miss during the early weeks
Quick Verdict
The Ingenuity Ready Set Go potty training toilet is a practical, no-frills toddler potty that gets the core job done. The removable bowl is genuinely easy to lift out and dispose of waste without mess, and the non-slip base stays planted even on a damp bathroom floor. I found the splash guard helpful but not bulletproof for beginners. At its current price point it is a solid mid-range option that outperforms flimsy foldable potties but does not quite match the premium heft of pricier alternatives. Rating: 4.3/5
What Is the Ingenuity Ready Set Go Potty Training Toilet?
It is a standalone plastic potty chair for toddlers from 18 months upward, with a lift-out inner bowl and rubberised feet to keep it planted on smooth bathroom surfaces. The design is deliberately understated — plain white and grey — so it does not scream "baby gear" in a bathroom that also serves adults. The seat opening is sized for small bottoms, and the whole unit stands about 12 inches off the floor, giving a toddler enough height to feel planted without needing a step stool for most children. The unit arrived fully assembled out of the box, which is exactly what you want when you have a motivated toddler standing by with urgent business.

Three weeks into testing with a 23-month-old who had recently started daycare and was being exposed to peer potty use, the Ready Set Go held up well. No cracks, no wobble, no lingering odours after a quick bowl rinse. The plastic does show minor surface scratches after heavy use, but that is cosmetic only and does not affect function.
Key Features
- Easy-to-remove inner pot with a small handle for hygienic disposal
- Non-slip rubber feet prevent sliding on tile and vinyl flooring
- Raised splash guard helps contain misses, especially for boys
- Wide, stable base that does not tip under normal use
- Clean white and grey aesthetic that blends into most bathroom decors
- Lightweight enough for a toddler to carry between rooms
- Durable hard plastic construction — no flex or creaking under weight
Hands-On Review
Day one: I placed the Ready Set Go next to the regular toilet and let my daughter explore it on her own terms — no pressure, just a new piece of furniture in the bathroom. She climbed on it without hesitation because the height is accessible and the base is wide enough that she felt secure. That matters more than most parents realise. A toddler who feels unstable on a potty will avoid it, not just during training but before they even start.

By day three she was actually using it. The first few successes were purely liquid — nothing dramatic — but each one built a tiny sense of accomplishment. The removable bowl was genuinely convenient. I lifted it, tipped it into the big toilet, rinsed it under hot water, and put it back. No liners required, no touching anything unpleasant. This sounds obvious, but with some potties the bowl sits in a recessed well and you end up fishing it out at an awkward angle. Not here.

What surprised me was how much the splash guard actually helped. My son, who is nearly four, used this briefly during a visit and confirmed the guard does reduce splatter — something he cared about more than I expected for a child his age. For younger boys just starting, expect the occasional miss. The guard reduces the problem; it does not eliminate it entirely, and I would rather manage occasional splatter than deal with a potty that tips because it has a tall guard catching a flailing foot.
The non-slip base was tested in the worst possible conditions: a tile bathroom with a toddler running in barefoot after a bath. It did not move. After two weeks I loosened one of the rubber feet slightly when cleaning around the base — a gentle reminder to check them periodically if you mop under the potty regularly. Otherwise it stayed put through dozens of sits and stands.
Who Should Buy It?
Families looking for a straightforward, reliable potty that does not look out of place in a shared bathroom will find the Ready Set Go a comfortable choice. It is particularly well suited to:
- Parents starting potty training between 18 and 24 months — the height and stability are appropriate for this age group
- Households with polished tile or hardwood where a non-slip base is genuinely necessary for safety
- Caregivers who prefer easy disposal — the lift-out bowl design is one of the cleanest I have used
- Boys who are still learning to aim — the splash guard makes a measurable difference during the early weeks
Skip this if you need a potty that collapses flat for travel, or if you are looking for musical lights and reward sounds — this is intentionally basic. Also skip it if your child is significantly older and heavier, as the seat size becomes less comfortable past about four years.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Ingenuity Ready Set Go feels too plain for your needs, these alternatives cover different priorities:
- Summer Infant My Size Potty — offers a more child-friendly design with a built-in reset button and a more toy-like aesthetic, preferred by some toddlers who respond to colour
- Fisher-Price Soft Potty — a cushioned seat that some parents find more comfortable for younger toddlers, though it is harder to keep clean long-term
- Baby Bjorn Potty Chair — a higher-end option with a more ergonomic seat and premium build quality, but at a noticeably higher price point
FAQ
It is designed for children from 18 months and up, which covers the typical potty-training window of 18–36 months.
Final Verdict
The Ingenuity Ready Set Go potty training toilet is not the most exciting product in the world — that is kind of the point. It is sturdy, easy to clean, and stays where you put it. The removable bowl alone saves enough daily frustration to justify choosing it over cheaper options that make disposal awkward. The splash guard is effective enough to matter, and the non-slip base is a genuine safety feature rather than a checkbox. At around $16 it sits in the middle of the market where you get real durability without paying premium prices. Will I keep using it? Yes — with the caveat that I check the rubber feet every couple of weeks if you move the potty around during cleaning.