The twin stroller decision is deceptively complicated. It seems like it should be straightforward — you need to push two babies, you buy a stroller that holds two babies — and then you start researching and discover that there are approximately forty options, they cost anywhere from $300 to $1,400, and everyone on the internet has a strong opinion.
I’ll save you the rabbit hole. Here’s the practical breakdown, including what I use as a solo parent who needs to fold and unfold a stroller alone approximately a thousand times a week.
Side-by-Side vs. Tandem: The Core Decision
Before you look at specific strollers, figure out which configuration makes sense for your life.
Side-by-Side
Both babies sit next to each other. The stroller is wide — usually 29–31 inches — which means you need to think about doorways (standard US doors are 32–36 inches, but many store entrances, restaurants, and older buildings are tighter), narrow aisles, and whether it fits in your car trunk.
Pros:
- Equal experience for both babies — same view, same recline
- Generally easier for babies to interact with each other
- Often easier to access both babies simultaneously
- Typically lighter and easier to fold than tandems
Cons:
- Width is a real practical limitation
- Harder to navigate crowded spaces
- May not fit in standard car trunks without some maneuvering
Tandem (Front-and-Back)
One baby in front, one in back. The stroller is the same width as a single, so it fits through standard doors and narrow spaces easily.
Pros:
- Fits through standard doorways without turning sideways
- Easier to navigate restaurants, shops, tight spaces
- Often better for urban or crowded environments
Cons:
- Back seat typically has a worse view and experience
- Harder to see and access the back baby
- Often heavier and more complex to fold
- Back baby may feel secondary (this bothered me more than it bothered them)
The Strollers Worth Considering
UPPAbaby Vista V2 with Rumble Seat
Configuration: Tandem Weight: ~33 lbs Price: ~$1,400 for base + rumble seat Folds: Yes, with both seats attached (technically — it’s large)
The Vista is the stroller I see most often in the wild in affluent suburbs. It’s beautifully made, smooth to push, and extremely versatile. The rumble seat adds a second seat, and you can also add a bassinet for a newborn.
The problem for twins from birth: the bassinet and rumble seat combo doesn’t work well for two newborns simultaneously. Most people use it when one twin is older and the other is a newborn, or use it with both in seats once they’re past 3 months.
For a solo parent: folding it alone is manageable but requires practice. It folds with the seat attached, which is a genuine quality-of-life feature.
Shop UPPAbaby Vista on Amazon → (affiliate link)
Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Double
Configuration: Side-by-side Weight: ~28 lbs Price: ~$550–600 Folds: One-hand fold, genuinely
The City Mini GT2 Double is the stroller I actually recommend most. It’s side-by-side, which means you do deal with the width, but the one-hand fold is legitimately one-handed and fast. For solo parents, this matters enormously — you need to fold and stow this thing while holding two babies, often in a parking lot in the rain.
The all-terrain wheels handle gravel paths, grass, and uneven pavement without effort. It reclines fully flat, which means you can use it from birth. The canopies on each side are independent, so you can shade one baby without the other.
It fits through most standard doorways but is tight in crowded spaces. In my experience, if you’re doing primarily suburban/outdoor life (parks, neighborhood walks, Target), this is the right stroller.
Shop Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Double on Amazon → (affiliate link)
Bugaboo Donkey Twin
Configuration: Side-by-side Weight: ~31 lbs Price: ~$1,800 Folds: Yes, but not simply
The Bugaboo Donkey is beautiful, extremely well-made, and very expensive. It’s modular — you can configure it as a single, a single with a bassinet, or a true side-by-side with two seats or two bassinets. The design is sleeker than most doubles and it pushes smoothly.
The honest take: it’s a lot of money for a stroller, the fold is not intuitive, and the configuration changes require more effort than they should. If you have the budget and care about aesthetics, it’s a great product. If you’re looking for value, the City Mini GT2 does most of the same things for a third of the price.
Shop Baby Bugaboo Donkey Twin on Amazon → (affiliate link)
Joovy Scooter X2
Configuration: Side-by-side Weight: ~26 lbs Price: ~$350 Folds: Standard double fold
The Joovy is the budget option worth knowing about. At $350, it’s the least expensive decent double on this list. It’s heavier than it looks, the ride isn’t as smooth as the City Mini, and the canopies are smaller — but it works, it’s durable, and if you’re watching your budget (especially because you’ve also spent money on cribs, car seats, a Twin Z pillow, and everything else), it’s a legitimate option.
Shop Joovy Scooter X2 on Amazon → (affiliate link)
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Stroller | Config | Weight | Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 | Side-by-side | 28 lbs | ~$575 | Most parents — best value |
| UPPAbaby Vista V2 + Rumble | Tandem | 33 lbs | ~$1,400 | Urban, design-focused |
| Bugaboo Donkey 5 | Side-by-side | 31 lbs | ~$1,800 | High budget, modular needs |
| Joovy Scooter X2 | Side-by-side | 26 lbs | ~$350 | Budget-conscious |
What I Actually Use
Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Double. The one-hand fold won me over in the first week and I’ve never regretted it. I live in Colorado and do a lot of outdoor walking — parks, paved trails, uneven surfaces — and the all-terrain wheels handle it. I’ve used it solo hundreds of times in parking lots, airports, and trailheads without needing a second adult.
It fits in my car trunk without issue and through most doorways if I approach at a slight angle. For anything truly narrow — small restaurants, boutiques — I just leave it outside or use a carrier.
If I were starting over and lived in a dense urban area, I’d probably look harder at a tandem for the doorway issue. But for suburban/outdoor life with a solo parent setup, side-by-side wins.
Car Seat Compatibility: Check Before You Buy
If you’re doing an infant car seat + stroller travel system, confirm compatibility before purchasing either product. Not all strollers accept all car seat adapters, and for twins you need adapters for two seats simultaneously.
Baby Jogger makes adapters for most major infant car seat brands (Chicco, Graco, Britax). UPPAbaby is compatible with its own Mesa seat and a short list of others. Check the manufacturer’s compatibility list, not just Amazon reviews.
Related Twin Gear
- Twin Z Pillow vs. Two Boppies: Which One Do You Actually Need? →
- NICU Hospital Bag Checklist →
- My First Year with Preemie Twins →
Affiliate disclosure: Some links are affiliate links. I only recommend products I’ve actually used or thoroughly researched.






2 responses to “Best Twin Strollers: Side-by-Side vs. Tandem (And What I Actually Use)”
[…] In my previous stroller post, I detailed the extensive research and consideration that went into selecting the right twin stroller. The debate between top-and-bottom (tandem) and side-by-side configurations was significant. Ultimately, I chose the UPPAbaby Vista based on a trusted recommendation and the strategic purchases I made around Black Friday from Albee Baby, which offered the best rates. The Vista’s versatility, along with the Mesa car seats’ compatibility, has made it an excellent choice for our family. […]
[…] Best strollers for twins: side-by-side vs. tandem → […]