Best Baby Bath Time Gear of 2025: Tubs, Towels, and Tips

Best Baby Bath Time Gear of 2025: Tubs, Towels, and Tips
Bath time can be one of the sweetest parts of the day — or one of the most stressful, depending on your gear and setup. The right bath time essentials make all the difference between a slippery, nerve-wracking experience and a calm, enjoyable routine. Here are our 2025 picks.
Best Baby Bathtub: The First Years Sure Comfort Deluxe
This tub has been a parent favorite for years, and for good reason. It works from newborn through toddler with a removable sling insert for tiny babies. The contoured design keeps baby in a comfortable, semi-reclined position, and the built-in drain plug makes emptying easy.
At under $25, this is one of the best values in all of baby gear. It fits in most kitchen and bathroom sinks for newborn baths, then transitions to the regular bathtub as baby grows. The mesh sling supports newborns securely, and the textured surface prevents sliding for older babies who can sit.
Why it's our top pick
- Three-stage design grows from newborn through toddler
- Mesh sling for secure newborn support
- Built-in drain plug for easy emptying
- Under $25 — exceptional value
Best Premium Tub: Stokke Flexi Bath
If you want something more elegant (and foldable), the Stokke Flexi Bath is a Scandinavian-designed tub that collapses flat for storage. It's ideal for small bathrooms or families who don't want a bulky tub taking up space. The optional newborn support insert keeps tiny babies secure.
At around $45, it's pricier than basic tubs but the foldability is genuinely useful. The non-slip base keeps it stable, and it's large enough to use well into toddlerhood. The design is clean and attractive, which matters when it's sitting in your bathroom.
Best Hooded Towels: Natemia Bamboo Hooded Towels
Regular towels work fine, but bamboo hooded towels are a meaningful upgrade. Natemia's bamboo towels are incredibly soft, highly absorbent, and naturally hypoallergenic. The hood keeps baby's head warm after the bath, and the generous size (40x30 inches) wraps even larger babies completely.
At about $20 for a two-pack, they're affordable enough to have several in rotation. Bamboo fabric gets softer with every wash, which is the opposite of most cotton towels. These make excellent baby shower gifts, too.
Best Baby Wash: Mustela Gentle Cleansing Gel
For baby's skin, less is more. Mustela's Gentle Cleansing Gel is tear-free, biodegradable, and formulated for newborn skin. It works as both body wash and shampoo, simplifying your bath setup. The light, clean scent is pleasant without being overpowering.
A bottle lasts forever because you need very little — a small squirt for the whole baby. At around $12, it's reasonably priced for a premium baby wash. We also like Pipette and Burt's Bees Baby as solid alternatives.
Best Bath Thermometer: Fridababy 3-in-1 True Temp
Taking the guesswork out of water temperature is a safety win. The Fridababy 3-in-1 floats in the tub and gives a real-time digital temperature reading. It also works as a room thermometer and has a clock function. The color-coded display (blue for too cold, green for just right, red for too hot) makes it instantly readable.
At around $12, it's an inexpensive way to ensure bath water is safe. The ideal bath temperature for babies is 98-100 degrees Fahrenheit — close to body temperature. This little device eliminates the wrist-test guessing game.
Best Bath Kneeler: Skip Hop Moby Bath Kneeler
Your knees will thank you for this purchase. Bathing a baby means kneeling on a hard bathroom floor, and after a few weeks, it gets painful. The Skip Hop Moby is a cushioned kneeling pad with an elbow rest that drapes over the tub. The non-slip base keeps it in place, and it hangs to dry after use.
At around $25, it's a small investment in your own comfort during a task you'll do hundreds of times. The elbow rest is surprisingly useful — it gives you a padded surface to lean on while supporting baby with your other hand.
Bath Safety Tips
Never leave baby unattended
This is the most important rule of bath time. Babies can drown in as little as one inch of water. If the phone rings or someone's at the door, take baby with you or ignore it. No exceptions, ever.
Water temperature check
Always check water temperature before putting baby in. Use a thermometer or your elbow (more sensitive than your hand). Water should feel warm, not hot — 98-100 degrees Fahrenheit.
Gather everything first
Have your towel, washcloth, soap, clean diaper, and outfit all within arm's reach before you start. You should never need to step away from baby during bath time.
Less water is better
For newborns, you only need a few inches of water. There's no need to fill the tub — just enough to keep baby warm while you wash them.
When to Start Real Baths
Newborns only need sponge baths until the umbilical cord stump falls off (usually 1-3 weeks). After that, you can transition to a baby tub. Baths don't need to happen daily — two to three times a week is plenty for most babies in the first year, with spot-cleaning of face, hands, and diaper area as needed.
The Bottom Line
The First Years Sure Comfort Deluxe tub is our top recommendation for its outstanding value and grow-with-baby design. Add Natemia bamboo towels and Mustela wash for a complete bath setup. Visit the bath time category for all our reviews and recommendations.


