# The Baby Registry Checklist: Everything You Actually Need

> A category-by-category guide to what to put on your baby registry — with must-have quantities, honest skips, and safety-conscious picks grounded in real research.

*Published 2026-06-25 · By Claire Bennett, CPST*

The short answer
A complete baby registry covers six core categories — sleep, travel, feeding, diapering, bathing, and clothing — with a handful of must-haves in each. Most families need 50–80 items total. Prioritize safety-critical pieces (car seat, crib mattress) for quality and certifications, then save aggressively on short-use clothing and novelty items.

Building a baby registry feels exciting and overwhelming in equal measure. The sheer number of products marketed to expecting parents — many claiming to be essential — makes it genuinely difficult to distinguish the things you will reach for every day from the items that will collect dust before the baby's first month is over. This guide cuts through the noise with a category-by-category checklist grounded in real safety research, CPSC guidance, and the honest experience of parents who have been there.

*This guide is general information, not medical advice. Discuss any health or safety questions specific to your baby with your pediatrician or care provider.*

## What Are the Non-Negotiable Items Every Baby Registry Needs?

Before you scan a single item, it helps to understand the framework. Baby gear falls into two tiers: **safety-critical** items where quality and certification matter, and **convenience** items where you can save aggressively. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission regulates both, but the safety stakes are not equal across categories. Here is the core must-have list, organized by category.

### Sleep

  - **Crib or bassinet (1).** For a crib, any model manufactured after June 2011 meets CPSC's reinforced safety standards banning drop-side rails and mandating slat spacing of no more than 2&#8209;3/8 inches. The IKEA SNIGLAR (~$120) is a long-standing safety-focused budget pick; it converts to a toddler bed and meets all current standards. Never use a crib made before June 2011 regardless of appearance.

  - **Crib mattress (1).** This is the single highest-priority chemical-safety item on your registry. Research published in *Environmental Science and Technology* by Dr. Miriam Diamond's team at the University of Toronto found up to 21 harmful chemicals — including phthalates, organophosphate flame retardants, and hormone-disrupting UV-filter compounds — in children's breathing zones during sleep, with emissions spiking under body heat and pressure. Look for **GOTS certified** (prohibits chemical flame retardants and polyurethane foam throughout the mattress), **OEKO-TEX Standard 100 Class I**, or **MADE SAFE** certification. Budget for $200–$400 more than a conventional mattress — this is the most justified upgrade on the entire list.

  - **Fitted crib sheets (2–3).** Organic cotton, snug fit. You will launder these frequently.

  - **Swaddle blankets / sleep sacks (3–4).** Muslin swaddles for the newborn phase; transition to a sleep sack once rolling begins.

  - **White noise machine (1, optional but highly recommended).** Basic models from Marpac or LectroFan start under $40 and significantly ease sleep transitions.

### Travel & Transport

  - **Infant car seat (1).** Every car seat sold in the United States meets the same federal safety standards set by NHTSA — the cheapest compliant seat is structurally as protective as the most expensive. What justifies spending $150–$350 on a well-reviewed model (Chicco KeyFit, Nuna PIPA, Graco SnugRide) is *ease of correct installation, harness adjustability, and extended weight range*. Never purchase a used car seat: crash damage from even a minor fender-bender is invisible and structurally compromises protection. For chemical safety, Nuna is the only brand with an entire line free of added flame retardant chemicals, using Merino wool and TENCEL lyocell to meet flammability standards naturally; UPPAbaby eliminated PFAS from its 2025 lineup.

  - **Stroller (1).** Match stroller type to your lifestyle. A full-size stroller (Bugaboo Butterfly, UPPAbaby VISTA, Mockingbird Single-to-Double) in the $500–$1,200 range typically outlasts two to three children and retains 50–70% resale value, making cost-per-use competitive with budget models that fail within 18 months. A lightweight option like the Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 (~$350) suits urban parents prioritizing compact fold. Travel systems (car seat + stroller combo adapter) simplify the newborn phase.

  - **Baby carrier or wrap (1).** The Ergobaby Omni Deluxe (~$219) supports newborn positioning certified by the International Hip Dysplasia Institute and extends use to 48 months. A stretchy wrap (Solly Baby, ~$70) is gentler for the immediate newborn stage. Having at least one hands-free option is genuinely transformative in the early weeks.

### Feeding

  - **Nursing bras (2–3) and nursing pads (1 box disposable + 1 set reusable).**

  - **Breast pump (1).** Most insurance plans cover a breast pump at no cost under the ACA's preventive services mandate — confirm with your insurer before registering. Hospital-grade multi-user rental is also an option for the early weeks.

  - **Bottles (4–6) and bottle brush (1).** Start with a variety — babies are particular about nipple flow and shape. Newborn nipples flow slowest; do not rush to faster flows.

  - **Formula (1–2 cans, if not exclusively breastfeeding).** Register for a trial supply rather than a large quantity — many babies have preferences.

  - **Burp cloths (8–10).** You will use more of these than you expect. Muslin or terry cloth both work; the quantity matters more than the brand.

  - **Boppy or nursing pillow (1).**

  - **High chair (1, add at 3–4 months).** The IKEA ANTILOP (~$20) is the pediatric community's longstanding budget recommendation — easy to clean, meets all safety standards, and attaches to most tables.

### Diapering

  - **Diapers (1–2 boxes newborn + 1–2 boxes size 1).** Do not over-stock newborn size; many babies bypass it quickly. Diapers and wipes run approximately $86/month for the first year based on BabyCenter 2025 survey data.

  - **Wipes (2–3 large packs).** Unscented, fragrance-free.

  - **Changing pad + 2 waterproof covers (1).**

  - **Diaper cream (1 tube zinc oxide, 1 tube gentler daily barrier cream).**

  - **Diaper bag (1).** Backpack style distributes weight better for long days out.

### Bathing & Grooming

  - **Baby tub with sling or insert (1).**

  - **Hooded towels (2–3) and washcloths (4–6).**

  - **Fragrance-free baby wash and shampoo (1 each).** Look for EWG Verified or MADE SAFE certified products.

  - **Nail file or soft nail scissors (1).** Newborn nails grow fast and are sharp.

  - **Digital thermometer (1, rectal for accuracy in infants).**

  - **Nasal aspirator (1).** The Frida Baby NoseFrida is the most widely recommended by pediatricians.

### Clothing

Baby clothing is the clearest area to save. Infants advance through three to four clothing sizes in the first twelve months — individual garments are functionally disposable. Focus on **quantity and ease of dressing** over brand:

  - Onesies with snaps at the neck (for pulling over the head) and at the bottom: 6–8 per size, newborn through 6 months

  - Footed sleepers: 4–6 per size

  - Socks: 6–8 pairs per size (they disappear constantly)

  - Hats: 2–3 newborn size

  - Seasonal outer layer appropriate to your climate

Skip baby shoes for pre-walkers entirely — they serve no developmental purpose.

Safety note: flame retardants in baby clothing
Children's sleepwear in sizes 9 months and above must meet federal flammability standards. Snug-fitting sleepwear satisfies these without chemical treatment — this is why snug fit is specified on the label. Loose-fitting infant sleepwear may be treated with flame retardants. Choosing snug-fit options eliminates the need for chemical treatment.

## Which Items Are on Every Registry List but Rarely Worth Buying?

The baby product industry is remarkably good at manufacturing the sensation of need. These items appear on most generic registry lists and are rarely used enough to justify the registry space or the gift budget they consume:

  - **Wipe warmers.** Most parents stop using them by week six. Room-temperature wipes are fine.

  - **Dedicated baby food makers.** A standard blender or immersion blender purées equally well.

  - **Baby shoes (pre-walking).** Socks are sufficient and easier to get on and off.

  - **Nursery décor sets.** Matching lamp, wastebasket, and picture frame sets occupy registry space better used for consumables.

  - **Diaper stackers and changing table organizers.** A simple basket works.

  - **Boutique baby laundry detergent.** A fragrance-free, dye-free mainstream option (All Free Clear, Seventh Generation) meets pediatric dermatology guidance and costs far less.

  - **Baby bath kneeler.** A folded towel on the floor beside the tub works equally well.

For an honest look at where to direct budget instead, [Ally Financial's baby budgeting guide](https://www.ally.com/stories/family/budgeting-for-baby-items/) breaks down category spending by what parents actually report using versus what was returned unused.

## How Should You Think About Chemical Safety When Building a Baby Registry?

Chemical safety has moved from a fringe concern to a mainstream one — and the research now supports treating it as a parallel criterion to structural safety, particularly for products that contact your baby during sleep.

Two peer-reviewed studies published in April 2025 in *Environmental Science and Technology*, conducted by researchers at the University of Toronto including [Dr. Miriam Diamond](https://www.consumerreports.org/babies-kids/childrens-health/mattresses-can-be-source-of-harmful-chemicals-in-kids-rooms-a5263703680/), tested 16 children's foam mattresses and simultaneously sampled air in 25 babies' and children's bedrooms. Mattresses were tested under simulated sleep conditions — body temperature and a 15-pound load — and found up to 21 harmful chemicals in breathing zones, with the highest concentrations directly beside the mattress. Chemicals included phthalates, organophosphate flame retardants (including TCEP, a carcinogen banned in Canada since 2014), and hormone-disrupting UV-filter compounds. Emissions spiked with heat and pressure — the precise conditions a sleeping infant creates — and two mattresses violated Canadian safety regulations despite carrying certification labels.

The same concern applies to car seats and strollers, where conventional foam and fabric commonly contain organophosphate flame retardants and PFAS (&ldquo;forever chemicals&rdquo;) applied as water- and stain-resistant coatings. PFAS are persistent compounds linked to immune dysfunction, hormonal disruption, and reduced vaccine effectiveness in children. Nuna is the only brand with an entire product line free of added flame retardant chemicals; UPPAbaby eliminated PFAS from its 2025 lineup.

The [Environmental Working Group's Healthy Baby Registry guide](https://static.ewg.org/pdf/EWG_HealthyBabyRegistry_C07.pdf) identifies specific products across mattresses, car seats, and soft goods that meet overlapping chemical-safety certifications — GOTS, OEKO-TEX Standard 100 Class I, MADE SAFE, and GREENGUARD Gold. Budget-constrained families should prioritize the crib mattress first, where infant exposure is highest and longest, followed by the car seat. A certified organic crib mattress typically costs $200–$400 more than a conventional alternative — a meaningful but bounded upgrade relative to total first-year spending that commonly reaches $20,000–$30,000.

## How Do You Maximize Registry Discounts and Platform Benefits?

The standard money-maximizing strategy is to run multiple registries simultaneously. Use **Babylist as your public-facing hub** — it accepts items from any retailer, offers cash fund contributions via PayPal or Venmo (not store credit), includes a price-comparison tool, and provides a 15% completion discount on Babylist Shop purchases. Note that Babylist's discount excludes certain brands including UPPAbaby, Nuna, and Mockingbird.

Maintain private registries on **Amazon** (15% completion discount for Prime members, capped at $2,000 in purchases) and **Target** (15% storewide, usable twice; RedCard holders add an extra 5%) to capture each platform's discount window separately. Even self-purchasing only items you genuinely need through the completion windows can yield $200–$500 in combined savings.

Babylist's Hello Baby Box — a welcome box of sample products — requires adding at least three Babylist Shop items, three external items, completing 40% of the registry checklist, having $30 in Babylist Shop purchases, and paying an $8.95 shipping fee. Amazon unlocks its Welcome Box after someone purchases one item valued at $10 or more. Target's Welcome Kit is available free from the in-store Guest Services desk, though it is frequently out of stock at high-traffic locations.

## Sources

1. [Best Baby Registries in 2026: How to Maximize Discounts and Simplify Shopping](https://pregnantchicken.com/best-baby-registries/)
2. [The Ultimate Baby Registry Showdown: Amazon vs. Target vs. Babylist and More](https://bumpandready.com/2025/06/15/%F0%9F%8D%BC-the-ultimate-baby-registry-showdown-amazon-vs-target-vs-babylist-and-more/)
3. [Save vs. Splurge: Best Baby Gear for Every Budget](https://www.babylist.com/hello-baby/save-vs-splurge)
4. [Mattresses Can Be a Major Source of Harmful Chemicals in Kids' Rooms](https://www.consumerreports.org/babies-kids/childrens-health/mattresses-can-be-source-of-harmful-chemicals-in-kids-rooms-a5263703680/)
5. [EWG's Healthy Baby Registry](https://static.ewg.org/pdf/EWG_HealthyBabyRegistry_C07.pdf)
6. [Cribs Safety Education](https://www.cpsc.gov/safety-education/safety-guides/kids-and-babies/cribs)
7. [Used Baby Gear Safety Guide: What to Buy Secondhand and What to Buy New](https://www.mother.ly/baby/baby-products/used-baby-gear/)
8. [Best Non-Toxic Stroller in 2026 (PFAS-Free, Flame Retardant-Free)](https://nontoxiclab.com/best-non-toxic-stroller/)
9. [Product Profile: Crib Mattresses](https://madesafe.org/blogs/viewpoint/product-profile-crib-mattresses)
10. [Baby Budgeting: When to Splurge or Save](https://www.ally.com/stories/family/budgeting-for-baby-items/)

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Source: https://natalnew.com/registry/baby-registry-checklist
Index: https://natalnew.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://natalnew.com/llms-full.txt
