Best Baby Gates 2017 Reviewed and Rated
Best Baby Gates 2017 Reviewed and Rated
When should I buy a baby gate?
Once
your baby starts crawling, then walking, you will realize just how
dangerous your house is! Stairways, fireplaces, exterior doors, glass
furniture, fragile decorations. You name it, your baby will soon find
it! To prevent your baby from getting hurt or gaining access to a
certain area, most parents install gates at various places around the
house. For instance, at the top and bottom of stairs, blocking a
fireplace, or in the middle of a room as a little baby corral. Parents
also use them to secure play areas, like a play room, without having to
close the door. Baby gates are also great for keeping that curious,
jealous, or toy-gobbling dog away from a newborn! Not surprisingly,
there are different gates that are better or worse suited for each of
these uses.
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What kind of baby gate should I buy?
There are a lot of considerations when choosing a baby gate. Here are some of the more important ones:
Where you plan to put the gate matters! Simple
swing-open gates are great for doorways and at the top and bottom of
stairs. But the ones that are tension-fit require walls on each side to
support the outward pressure; do not attempt to install these
tension-fit gates in situations where one side is a wall and the other
side is a railing post (like at the top or bottom of stairs). The
outward pressure will push the railings to the side and eventually give
you a wobbly railing. Also, do not install a gate at the top of the
stairs if it has a bottom (step-over) rail - this is a serious tripping
hazard, and should always be avoided. Because of these different uses of
baby gates, below we categorize gates by their primary uses: ordinary/doorways, versus top-of-stairs.
The gate needs to be sturdy! Babies
will amaze you with their ability to foil all your best attempts to
keep them safe. They will try to pull the gate, push the gate, climb the
gate, lean on the gate, or bite the gate! All of the gates recommended
below are rated as the best in terms of sturdiness, to help you keep
your sanity when you can't have your eyes on baby 100% of the time.
The locking mechanism needs to be child-proof! This
seems obvious, but there are a lot of gates on the market with locks
that babies figure out before their second birthday. Avoid gates with a
simple button lock, or a simple lift-open mechanism. Your baby may not
figure out how to open the gate now, but give him or her another year
and you'll be kicking yourself for not buying a gate with a better,
relatively child-proof lock. All of the gates recommended below have
well-reviewed locking mechanisms that are reliable, easy for parents to
use, and difficult for babies to figure out (or physically grasp).
Little fingers pinch very easily! We
don't recommend any of the wooden expanding gates, or the gates with
the pressure locking bars. These increase the risk of finger pinchings,
and in some cases lacerations, and should be avoided. But if you have a
pet-only home and you're trying to keep your dog in certain areas,
they're quite good for that purpose!
You want to open the gate with one hand! Carrying
the baby? A laundry basket? Groceries? Talking on the phone? The last
thing you'll want to do is put something down because both hands are
required to open the gate's locking and swing mechanism. All of the
gates recommended below have well-reviewed locking mechanisms that can
be opened with one hand. It's a complicated trade-off between making it
difficult for a baby to open, while keeping it easy enough for an adult
to open with one hand. This usually means the locking mechanism will
require larger hands to grip and pinch/rotate/slide. As a result, some
adults with smaller or weaker hands (like older relatives) tend to have
some difficulty with modern gate locks.
Make sure your doorway isn't too wide! Some
baby gates come with extensions to accomodate larger doorways, but
other gates do not. If your door opening is greater than 31" wide, then
you will likely need at least one extension. So keep this in mind. In
our recommendations below, we provide specifications regarding door
widths and when available, links to extension kits that fit the
application.
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