A cost-saving way to dispose of soiled diapers! This diaper pail's unique design keeps odors inside so you can enjoy baby's baby-fresh scent. It's so easy to use - you just drop in the diaper and close the lid. The lid is designed to push the diaper through odor-guard flaps and into the storage compartment. It uses standard trash bags - a savings of nearly $200 per year. The child-resistant locking button will keep curious little ones out as they grow and it holds up to 24 diapers. It couldn't be easier to keep the nursery smelling fresh and clean!
To answer the first question on everyone's mind. Yes indeed it is... odorless. This wondrous white contraption from Safety 1st lives up to its name by trapping even the stinkiest of nappies (around 18 to 24 in all) in a sealed bag within a deodorized compartment. The additional beauty of this odor-eater is that it uses standard 13-gallon kitchen garbage bags. Read: no refills (Can I get an amen?). It's easy to use, with just three steps; after all, who has time to mess with a tricky diaper pail when you have a wiggly baby on your hip, anyway? A child-resistant lock keeps the lid in place and your toddling kid's curiosity unfulfilled. This is an economical, easy to clean, and stink-free way to manage the dirtiest part of parenthood.
Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
Works good!, January 6, 2009
By
H. TollefsonWe purchased this diaper pail with our first son. We put all poopy diapers in baggies and tie them shut before placing them in the pail, and under normal circumstances would empty it once a week without a smell in the nursury.
We're going on our second baby and I was wondering if the deoderizing part of this can be replaced at all. I haven't seen them sold anywhere.
Works Great, August 24, 2008
By
Rikki Dalenberg (Phoenix, AZ USA)
I have used this diaper pail since we brought our son home over 3 years ago- it is now being used for his little sister. We didn't have any odor problems, but, I will admit that we put poopy diapers in the garage with our son, but we started using cloth diapers with our daughter, so they all get put in together, with the poop dumped out of course. Getting a new deodorizer disk helped a lot, as did making sure that it gets emptied every 2-3 days.
Canton Mommy, August 22, 2008
By
LT (Boston, MA)
I love this pail. It takes regular trash bags and contains the odors. It's not exactly odor proof, but you won't smell anything unless you leave it for more than two weeks. I keep a spray can of room freshener next to the pail and when I get a stinking diaper, I give the pail lid (the inside blue part) a quick spray and everything is fine. I'm happy with the purchase and since it was only 15 bucks, you can't beat the pricing. - Months later and still love it!!!
Not perfect, but personal touches have made it better, July 10, 2008
By
Jennifer Swan (Kennesaw, GA)
We received this pail when my son was 3 days old. I loved that it didn't need special expensive bags. I do buy scented kitchen bags though (Glad vanilla) and have placed an odor eating type device in the bottom. The catch function never worked with tiny infant diapers. So we removed and tossed. For the nastier poop diapers we use those on the go dollar store individual bags to wrap them up or even lunch baggies. I have two children using the pail now, in the heat of summer. It is dumped more often. But even with the additional purchases I have made it is still a whole lot cheaper than the individual bagged system. I priced one recently for a shower gift and bought them this one instead!
Cheap and it works, May 30, 2007
By
cam (Lexington, KY USA)
We have used this pail for 3 years, and 2 kids. The advantage is that this pail doesn't require any special bags. We change out the bag twice a week. You save a lot of money if you get sheap bags at Dollar Tree or Big Lots (works out to about 10-cents a bag). It does get stinky sometimes, but all garbage pails do and every child has an extra stinky diaper occasionally. Roll with it and save money when and where you can.