20 Best Infant Toys, According to Child Development Experts
Fun, educational learning toys for babies from the newborn months into the toddler years.

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Don't count baby out at playtime. The littlest ones hit major milestones through playing with toys. They acquire new abilities like reaching, grasping, building hand-eye coordination, learning cause and effect and more. And it starts early. "Play is a skill that begins in infancy. We see a newborn go from unoccupied to enjoying solitary play within about 3 months. This is a big step for our little ones!" says Becky Thomas, founder and teacher at Playgroup. She's also a specialist in infant and family development, early childhood and special education.
In our list, we left out plush animals. You'll likely receive plenty of bears and bunnies as newborn gifts for your baby to love. Instead, our Good Housekeeping Institute parenting pros and early-childhood specialists focused on developmental toys that help with specific skills as well as toys that can be manhandled by your baby and that engage more than one of their senses.
Pros
Fun to nest, stack and knock down
Introduce colors, numbers and size
Holes in the bottom make them fun tub toys
Tens of thousands of five-star Amazon reviews
Cons
Not for young infants — best for 6 months and up
Cups nesting into each other is magic to a baby. And these colorful cups can do more: "Once an infant has developed the skill of grasping them, placing the cups on top of each other to create a tower is a great problem-solving and cause-and-effect form of play which is a precursor for so many skills later on," Thomas says.
Use these to talk about colors and show your baby the raised numbers on the bottom of each cup. They double as tub toys, because holes in the bottom of each cup turn each into a little sieves.
These are age-graded starting at 6 months because a baby needs some dexterity and patience to try and stack or nest them. (Knocking them over will be easier!) Plus, your baby is not going to name colors or numbers out loud until toddlerhood. Still, for pure value — you'll use these for years, your child can learn an array of skills from them and the set is less than $10 — these are hard to beat.
Ages | 6 months+ |
Primary material | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
32 finger holes so even a young baby can grab on
Lightweight and colorful
Helps with hand-eye coordination and grasp
Fun for years
Cons
Not dishwasher safe
It doesn't get much more classic than a ball — but infants have trouble grasping a smooth sphere. Even plush balls and bumpy balls can be a challenge at first, when a baby is just gaining hand-eye coordination. The 4-inch, lightweight Oball has a mesh design with 32 finger holes practically guaranteeing that your young baby will be able to grab on, wave this around and revel in a feeling of accomplishment.
"The Oball can be thrown, rolled, squashed and passed from hand to hand," Thomas says. This toy is not easy for a baby to gum as a teether but expect them to try and mouth it. It's not dishwasher-safe, so wipe it down with a damp, soapy cloth. This is another infant toy that lasts and lasts — we have a staffer with a 4-year-old who still loves this toy.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
Contrasting colors catch a newborn's eye
Rattles to engage your baby's hearing
Fun for an infant to grasp and explore
Watch your baby learn to pass it from hand to hand
Cons
It's a great first toy — but also the first toy they'll outgrow
One of the first things your newborn will do with a toy is track it with their eyes. Dangle these rings, made in eye-catching contrasting colors, and watch your infant learn to follow where they go. Shake the rattle and see if your newborn will turn toward the sound. These are the earliest forms of play!
Once your 3-month-old can reach for the NogginRings and grasp them, they'll love putting them in their mouth (of course) and exploring their shape and sounds. "This can help your infant learn to bring their hands together on an object, then transfer it hand to hand," says Jennifer Rothman, LCSW, a child therapist in New York City. NogginRings will stay fun throughout your baby's first year but your toddler will outgrow this little rattle.
Ages | Birth to 12 months |
Primary material | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
Babies love to manipulate the fabric tags
Crinkling, squeaking parts
Has patterns and hidden pictures to discover
Fun toy to put in front of your baby at tummy time
Cons
Large, not easy to throw in a diaper bag
Babies love to pull at fabric tags, and this tactile toy gives them plenty. Crinkling, squeaking parts, bright patterns, hidden pictures and mirrored surfaces plus a teething fin keep a baby fascinated and exploring. We like this for the prime tummy-time stage from 3 to 6 months when babies can build a lot of core strength by spending some playtime each day on the floor, placed on their tummy with a toy in front of them. Use this toy to encourage your baby to lift their head, then reach and flip the fish fins.
This is also a fun toy for your baby to explore while sitting in their bouncer seat. It's just a little bigger than it looks — just over a foot long — which surprises some parents, so it's not super easy to take around on the go.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | Polyester |
Pros
Sticks to flat surfaces, but also easy for a baby to pull off
Pieces are fun to fidget with and can stick to each other
Great high-chair toy
Later, a toddler can stick them anywhere
Cons
A little pricier than many baby toys
As you introduce solid foods, it's nice to have toys that keep your baby happy in the high chair, waiting to be served or digesting while you clean. Make the time educational with this set of three silicone fidget toys for infants that can stick to a flat surface, then pull off with a popping sound. "They're versatile and can continue to be played with as your child grows older and experiments with creative play," Rothman says.
Thomas agrees, adding, "Babies eventually figure out that they can plug pieces together and problem-solve as they create a construction plan. They'll stick them to different vertical surfaces."
This toy was a favorite with the daughter of Marisa LaScala, Good Housekeeping's Senior Parenting & Relationships Editor. She was obsessed — and so was LaScala and her husband. "We'd use them as fidget toys for ourselves!" LaScala says. Wash them in the dishwasher. They're a little pricier than most baby toys, but we think they're worth it.
RELATED: Best Toys and Gifts for 6-Month-Olds
Ages | 6 months+ |
Primary material | Silicone |
Pros
Excellent toy for building patience and frustration tolerance
Babies can put objects in and pull them back out
Helps babies develop spatial reasoning
Cons
You may have to demonstrate how it works to baby
Rather than a shape sorter, start a baby with a toy that lets them stuff things in and take them back out. "There's a stage of infant development when they begin to collect and this toy is so perfect for not only collecting the pieces it comes with, but any toy that can fit inside," Thomas says. "Fitting materials inside of the InnyBin requires strong fine-motor skills and problem-solving for size, fit and shape. This is a great toy for practicing determination and developing resilience through focus."
Prime time for this toy is 10 months to age 3, as a baby develops better spatial reasoning and gradually gains control over the pieces shaped like a cube, sphere, flower, diamond, happy face and triangle. If this frustrates your baby, first be sure they're in the age window. Second, demonstrate by showing how you pull a toy out or stuff one in. Third, let them experience the possibly maddening period of learning how to do it themselves. "They're building frustration tolerance," Rothman says. The payoff will be your baby beaming with pride.
Ages | 10 months+ |
Primary materials | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
Toys rattle, squeak and crinkle
Pieces are easy for an infant to grasp
Everything fits in the carrying case
Cons
Some online reviewers say this is smaller than expected
This Good Housekeeping Best Toy Awards winner includes a squeaking paint tube, a crinkling paint brush and a crayon that makes a giggling sound. The artist bear in a beret is sweet, too! When we tested with families, they loved that their infants could grasp and wave around the small toys by themselves, and that older babies were able to load the toys in and take them back out of the carry case.
Gund makes sensory-toy sets with other themes, too, like a food truck set, a plush duffel with four sports balls and a cute plush gift bag for a baby's first birthday. You can spot-clean the toys that make sounds and put the carrying case in the washer on the delicate cycle. Some online reviewers say the pieces are smaller than they expected; each toy is only 3 or 4 inches tall. They're baby-sized!
RELATED: Best Sensory Toys
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary materials | Embroidered fabric |
Pros
Montessori-inspired toys
Converts for a table, useful through preschool
Easy to put together
Cons
Age-graded for 4 months, but fun at more like 6 months
This new developmental baby toy is Montessori-inspired, with simple toys like a mirror, spinners and a wooden bead maze in muted colors. In stage one your baby sits inside, as shown. For stage two, it converts to a tabletop so a toddler can stand and play on the outside. In stage three, you take off the toys and use this as a table for a preschool kid. So it works for infancy through toddlerhood and into preschool.
When we tested this in our Lab and with parents, we found it easy to build and entertaining for babies who had good head and neck control. Though it is age-graded for 4 months and up, we found that babies started to really enjoy it at more like 6 months.
Ages | 4 months+ |
Primary materials | Plastic and wood |
Pros
Easy for infants to hold
Babies love to chew Sophie's legs, ears and antlers
Squeaks when squeezed
Classic teething toy around more than 60 years
Cons
Can't be sterilized; wipe clean only
Sometimes it seems as if every baby in America owns this toy. If yours has not yet met Sophie The Giraffe (real name: Sophie La Girafe, she's French), you might want to introduce them to this popular teething toy made of soft yet durable rubber that's been around since 1961.
There are a lot of theories as to why Sophie is a babe magnet. She's sized right and provides a bit of bumpy texture for infants, with their clumsy grips, to hold onto. "The shape of the toy offers so many ways to grasp it and it's long enough for an infant to easily bring to to their mouth," Thomas says. Sophie's dark eyes and big brown spots stand out on her white body, and babies love that contrast. Finally, she squeaks when squeezed, a cause-and-effect bonus that infants find hard to resist. "Both my babies tried other teethers but loved Sophie," one tester told us. "And seriously, every kid has a Sophie."
A downside is that it can't be sterilized, run through the dishwasher or submerged in water. In order to clean it, the brand recommends wiping it with a damp cloth.
RELATED: Best Teething Toys
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | Rubber |
Pros
Fun without being overstimulating
Long-lasting as it transitions from baby to toddler play
Tips for parents in the well-written play guide
High quality, Montessori-style toys
Cons
Highest price on our list
This brand makes one of our go-to subscription boxes, but you can buy this play gym à la carte. "I love that it's not visually overstimulating, like many baby play mats," Rothman says. "Plus, this is easy for a baby and mamma to use together." That's one of the things we like most — and it comes with an excellent play guide with stage-based tips and activities for you to try. (Because, let's face it, most of us do not actually know how to play with a baby!)
The high price is made more palatable by the fact that this can transform from a play gym into a toddler fort and last for years. We consider this one of our favorite high-quality baby toys because it comes with simple Montessori-style toys like a wooden batting toy and organic cotton ball as well as 14 high-contrast pictures on sturdy cards for your baby to study. The mat itself has different areas of color, pattern and texture to keep things interesting.
RELATED: 3 Best Baby Toy Subscription Boxes
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary materials | Polyester, organic cotton, wood |
Pros
Babies love to look in a mirror
Use at tummy time to get baby to lift their head
Attached fun sensory toys
Cons
Baby-safe mirror is more distorted than a regular one
One way to get a baby lying on their tummy to lift their head and look up is to offer them a glimpse of something cute: "Babies love looking in the mirror so this helps you extend tummy time," says Rothman.
This was a favorite for both daughters of Lexie Sachs, Good Housekeeping Institute's Executive Director, Strategy & Operations. "So vain, they loved to see themselves," Sachs joked. (Actually babies don't know it's them in the mirror until they're about 18 months old.) "They also loved reaching for the two sensory toys on the top and bottom."
The mirror is baby-safe and unbreakable, so it's a little more distorted than a regular glass mirror. Be sure to peel off the plastic film that comes on for more clarity.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | Plastic |
Pros
Small toy easy to take on the go
Lights up and plays 7 classical songs
Volume control
Cons
Comes with batteries but be ready to replace them
Kids love this for the lights and music. Parents appreciate the tunes, since it plays seven classical melodies by Mozart, Vivaldi, Chopin and more. It's pleasant for everyone, and there's volume control if you need it to be a bit louder in the car or softer at home.
We like this to throw in the diaper bag for outings because it's so small but so stimulating — if you need to soothe or distract your baby at a restaurant, in the supermarket or while doing a diaper change in an unfamiliar bathroom, this can be little lifesaver. It's also easy to wipe clean. It comes with the two AA batteries needed to get started but online reviews say that you'll want more on hand if your baby loves this toy and uses it often.
Ages | 3 to 36 months |
Primary material | Plastic |
Pros
Rainbow-colored rings feature different textures
Makes a fun clacking sound
You can use the C-shaped rings to dangle other toys
Dishwasher-safe and easy for travel
Cons
Not a "wow" toy, but it will see a lot of play
Infants love how these C-shaped rings clack together and fall all around the main circle ring, which is done up in contrasting black and white. Sassy's O Links are differently textured rings in rainbow colors and the toy, about 5 inches tall, is easy to take anywhere. Pull off any one ring for your infant to grip and gum or keep them all together as a rattling distraction as you travel around in the stroller, car seat or on a plane.
If the toy lands on the ground, feel at ease knowing that it is dishwasher-safe. Some parents say they also use the black and white ring to attach other toys for dangling — the main ring pulls open enough to link a toy on, or to clip it to something like the stroller harness. It's a small purchase, not a big giftable kind of toy, but one that you and your baby will probably turn to more than you'd expect.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
Wearable rattles let baby's own motion entertain them
High-contrast animal faces are easy for a newborn to see
Helps a baby discover their own feet
Cons
Watch for signs that your baby has had enough
Wait, did I just do that? When wearing sock rattles, an infant's own motion entertains them, leading to exciting discoveries like finding their own feet. The black and white zebra and smiling cheetah are also made for a newborn to be able to see their contrasting stripes and smiles. Eventually, your baby will have the dexterity to pull the booties off and hold them in their hand.
Some sensitive infants might get overwhelmed by the rattling after a few minutes, so be sure to keep an eye on your baby and remove the socks if looks as if they're agitated or grown tired of them.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary materials | Polyester |
Pros
Hones hand-eye coordination and fine-motor skills
Toy counts, plays songs and says lessons
Turn on an entire new set of phrases in Stage 2 mode
Batteries included
Cons
No volume control, but there is an off switch
A baby able to sit up and grasp, usually after 6 months, will enjoy fitting the 10 coins into this smiling piggy bank — and it hones their hand-eye coordination and fine-motor skills. The toy rewards their persistence with songs and phrases, offering words in Spanish and lessons in colors and counting. Once your infant has heard all of the Stage 1 lessons plenty of times, you can switch to Stage 2 for new lessons for your toddler.
We like that it comes with the batteries included and that the coins can all store inside the bank. You can turn off the music and sounds, but there is no volume control.
Ages | 6 to 36 months |
Primary materials | Plastic |
Pros
Babies love gripping the tactile animal tails
Bright pictures of the animals on the inside
Pages crinkle, too
Go through it together and name the animals for baby
Cons
Not a lot of text — for that, grab a board book
Before their clumsy little hands are even ready to turn the pages of a board book, your baby can play with all the tactile features on this soft cloth baby book. Infants can pull on the dangling tails — they love to pull tags and pieces of fabric. Follow each tail to the animal inside and call out its name.
The pages crinkle for added interest. Jellycat makes other variations, like one called Farm Tails. This is a book you can explore together — but to help your baby's vocabulary grow, you should also read aloud from regular board books.
RELATED: Good Housekeeping Kids' Book Awards
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary material | Cloth |
Pros
Clips on to the stroller or diaper bag
Offers layers of materials and textures to explore
Thousands of reviews
Cons
Travel toys can get dirty and this has to be spot-cleaned
We're showing the firefly, but Lamaze makes a herd of bright, dangling creatures that include an axolotl, an octopus and a lobster. This clip-on toy can attach to the stroller and not be thrown overboard, which, you'll learn from experience, is a problem with other toys. Hook it around the stroller harness so your baby can hold this in their hand and explore the layers of textures and fabrics, little mirrors, clacking rings and more.
If your infant is still young and not reaching, just looking, you might hook it to the stroller canopy like a mobile. Some parents also hook one to the diaper bag so it's always available as a distraction during on-the-go diaper changes or if you're out running errands and your baby starts to fuss. Any toy that travels with you can get dirty, but note that this toy should be spot-cleaned only; it's not recommended for machine washing.
Ages | Birth+ |
Primary materials | Polyester, plastic |
Pros
Nine rings stack in any order
Play with them and talk about color, size and texture
Great tool for teaching counting from 1 to 9
Cons
Baby will outgrow this by the 2nd birthday
You can practically hear your baby's brain whirring as they play with these nine differently sized rings in varying colors and textures. The clear ring even makes a rattling sound. The rings can be stacked in any order, which decreases frustration when stacking.
Join in the play and show your infant the difference in size between the large black and white ring and the small one. Then count from 1 to 9 as you put the rings on the pole one at a time.
Stacking the rings helps hone hand-eye coordination. In fact this has been lauded as an early STEM toy that can help kids learn sorting, counting, sequencing and recognizing what is the same or different about two objects. We like that the rings are easy for an infant to grab and manipulate. They will outgrow this, however, and be ready to move on to building blocks by age 2.
Ages | 6 to 24 months |
Primary material | BPA-free plastic, according to the manufacturer |
Pros
Chunky, egg-shaped shakers your baby can control
Each has a different face, texture and sound
Cons
Sounds they produce is soft
Shake it up! Toys that play music for your baby are not as richly educational as something like these egg-shaped shakers that let your child make the sounds. We love that they're each shaped like an adorable animal to catch your baby's attention, that there are textures to explore on their bellies and that each one makes a slightly different noise when shaken. They're a bit chunky but if your baby can't grip one at 3 months, they may be able to hold and shake them by 6 months.
Note that the sounds these make are pretty soft. We like that they're not cacophonous but if your baby is shaking them while you play music, they might be hard to hear.
Ages | 3 months+ |
Primary material | Plastic |
Pros
Works both gross and fine motor skills
Activity panel removes to be a floor toy
Gives a new walker something to hold on to
More than 77,000 five-star Amazon reviews
Cons
Lights, sounds and songs can get overstimulating
Once your baby pulls to a stand and takes tentative steps, they're no longer your infant anymore — you're entering toddler territory. Help them along with a push toy your baby can use for balance as they stand and walk. This best-selling toy, which has tens of thousands of five-star Amazon reviews, is much safer than the kind of walker a baby sits inside, where they are essentially trapped. Your baby can let go from a push walker anytime they need to.
Your little one can first sit in front of this to play with all the toys on the activity panel, or the panel can be removed and used as a floor toy. They'll stay busy and hone fine-motor skills with the light-up piano keys, a play phone, gears that spin and buttons that, when pressed, deliver fun songs and vocabulary words. When your baby is ready to pull to a stand and work large-motor skills, the toy has a wide base for stability. Your baby can easily grab the green handlebar and push this four-wheeled walker.
The two AA batteries needed to get this started are included. The lights and sounds can get a little overstimulating but fortunately there are both high and low volume settings or you can turn it completely off.
Ages | 9 months to 3 years |
Primary material | Plastic |
Jessica (she/her) is a freelance writer with several decades of experience writing lifestyle content and evaluating home and parenting products. A mom of two teens and two cats, her previous work can be seen in American Baby and Parents.

Marisa (she/her) has covered all things parenting, from the postpartum period through the empty nest, for Good Housekeeping since 2018; previously, she wrote about parents and families at Parents and Working Mother. She lives with her toy-collecting husband and daughter in Brooklyn, where she can be found helping out her team at bar trivia or posting about movies on Twitter and Bluesky.


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