Bugaboo Butterfly 2 — Review & Advice

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The Bugaboo Butterfly 2 is Bugaboo’s travel pushchair — compact fold, lightweight, designed for parents who are regularly on the move. Bugaboo updated the original Butterfly in 2025 and the improvements are genuine rather than cosmetic.

I’ve covered Bugaboo since the early days of this site and the Butterfly range is interesting because it fills a specific gap: parents who want Bugaboo quality in a pushchair that actually fits in an overhead locker. If you’ve been on a flight with a full-size pushchair and spent twenty minutes at the gate arguing about whether it counts as oversized luggage, you’ll understand immediately why this matters.

As someone who has pushed pushchairs through airports and onto trains more times than I can count — including through Disneyland Paris on family holidays — I appreciate what Bugaboo have done here. It’s a proper pushchair that also happens to travel well, rather than a compromise travel buggy with Bugaboo branding.


What’s new in the Butterfly 2

The key improvement over the original Butterfly is the seat — the Butterfly 2 now lies fully flat, making it suitable from birth without needing a car seat adapter. The original Butterfly was only suitable from six months as a standalone pushchair, which was a significant limitation. That’s been fixed.

Other updates: larger wheels for better performance on different surfaces, an upgraded basket carrying up to 8kg, a storage pocket on the back of the seat, and a peek-a-boo window in the canopy. The one-second fold mechanism — the feature that made the original Butterfly stand out — remains, and it really is that fast.


Key specs

Weight: 7.3kg
Price: £435 (RRP)
Suitable from: Birth to 22kg (approximately 4 years)
Fold: One-second, IATA cabin-approved
Seat: Fully lie-flat to fully upright, forward-facing
Car seat compatible: Yes, with adapters (sold separately) — compatible with Cybex, Maxi-Cosi, Nuna and others

Check the current price of the Bugaboo Butterfly 2 on Amazon →


Who the Butterfly 2 is right for

Frequent travellers. IATA cabin-approved means it fits in the overhead locker on most flights. No gate-checking, no waiting at oversized baggage. If you fly regularly with a young child, this is one of the best options on the market.

Urban parents who need to be nimble. At 7.3kg with a one-second fold, the Butterfly 2 is genuinely easy to manage on public transport, in tight spaces, and on stairs. It folds with the seat in any position, which matters when you’re trying to get onto a bus one-handed.

Parents who want Bugaboo quality in a smaller package. The Butterfly 2 doesn’t feel like a budget compromise — the materials and build quality are unmistakably Bugaboo. If the Fox 5 is more pushchair than your life requires, the Butterfly 2 is worth serious consideration.

The honest caveats

The seat is forward-facing only in standard configuration. If you want your baby to face you, you’ll need a compatible car seat and the adapters. For some parents that’s fine; for others it’s a dealbreaker.

At 7.3kg it’s not the lightest compact pushchair available — the Babyzen YOYO and some others come in lighter. You’re paying for Bugaboo build quality and that fold mechanism, and most parents find the trade-off worthwhile.

Car seat adapters are sold separately, which adds to the overall cost if you want a travel system from birth.


Is the Bugaboo Butterfly 2 worth £435?

For the right parent, yes. If you travel regularly, use public transport frequently, or simply need a pushchair that’s genuinely easy to manage on your own, the Butterfly 2 earns its price tag. The one-second fold alone will save you considerable stress over the life of the pushchair.

If you’re mostly driving everywhere and doing gentle walks from a suburban house, you’d likely be better served by the Fox 5 or Dragonfly — pushchairs that prioritise ride quality and all-round performance over compactness.


About the author: Mark has been reviewing pushchairs since 2006, when he launched MyPushchair with his mother after struggling to find honest advice as a first-time dad. He has attended baby shows, tested hundreds of models over two decades, and now helps his daughter navigate the same market with her own children. His wife Janette contributes a female perspective to all assessments. Read Mark’s full story →


Have a question about the Bugaboo Butterfly 2? Get in touch and I’ll do my best to help.

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