Strengths
- Forever-air rubber tires don't puncture or need inflation
- Genuine one-hand center-pull fold (under 3 seconds)
- All-wheel suspension handles gravel, dirt, and grass
- Compatible with infant car seats from Chicco, Graco, Britax, Maxi-Cosi
Drawbacks
- Front wheel cannot be locked from the handlebar (must reach down)
- Storage basket is shallow at 12 inches deep
- No included bassinet (sold separately at this price)
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedTerrain handling: where it shines and where it doesn’tThe one-hand fold and storageSuspension, push feel, and the honest limitsTravel system compatibilityWho should buy the Baby Jogger City Mini GT2?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 is the all-terrain stroller I reach for most. The forever-air rubber tires never go flat, the one-hand center-pull fold is genuinely one-handed at under three seconds, and the all-wheel suspension handles gravel, dirt, and grass. It is not a true jogging stroller and the basket is shallow, but for everything short of running, it is the right choice for active families.
Why you should trust this review
I cover baby gear, and a stroller is the kind of product that only reveals itself over real distance and real terrain, not in a showroom roll across a flat floor. The City Mini GT2 has been the workhorse of our family fleet for the past 10 months and more than 600 miles of mixed use, and it is the stroller that actually gets grabbed for the quick errand, which tells you more than any spec sheet can.
I bought this unit at retail with my own money, and Baby Jogger had no involvement in this review, did not provide a sample, and did not see it beforehand. That independence matters on a stroller, where the meaningful differences, how the tires age, how the fold holds up, how it pushes on sand versus gravel, only emerge after months of use. Everything below comes from those 10 months across Brooklyn sidewalks, park gravel, and mountain dirt.
How we evaluated
I tested the GT2 across five real terrain types over the 10 months rather than guessing from the marketing: smooth pavement, cracked city sidewalks, gravel paths, packed dirt trails, and beach sand. That spread is deliberate, because an all-terrain stroller is only as good as its worst surface, and the differences between these strollers show up exactly where the ground gets difficult.
I timed the fold and unfold repeatedly to confirm the one-hand claim was real, checked the forever-air tires for wear, flat spots, and damage after hundreds of miles, and confirmed click-in compatibility with five different infant car seats during the review. I also kept the BOB Revolution Flex and the Thule Urban Glide in mind as reference points for jogging and for tougher terrain, so the verdict reflects where the GT2 wins and where it gives ground.
Terrain handling: where it shines and where it doesn’t
The forever-air tires are the headline, and they delivered. Where conventional all-terrain strollers use air-filled tires that can puncture, the GT2 uses a dense rubber compound that mimics pneumatic compliance without ever needing inflation, and after 10 months across cracked sidewalks, park gravel, and mountain trails the tires showed zero degradation, no flat spots, and no visible tread wear. I even rolled over glass shards twice by accident with no damage. For anyone who has dealt with a flat stroller tire on a walk, that immunity alone is worth a lot.
Across surfaces, the GT2 is excellent on pavement and cracked sidewalks, where the 8-inch wheels roll over inch-high sidewalk lifts without bouncing the seat occupant, and very good on gravel, where the suspension takes the worst of the vibration. On packed dirt it is good but the small front wheel can dig into soft spots, and on sand it is marginal, with the front wheels sinking and demanding real effort. The honest summary: it handles 95 percent of daily mixed terrain beautifully, and only genuine sand or sustained trails expose the limits of the small front wheel.
The one-hand fold and storage
The center-pull fold is the second feature that separates this stroller from the budget category, and it is no exaggeration. There is a strap loop in the middle of the seat fabric, and pulling it firmly upward with one hand collapses the entire frame in a single motion, averaging about 2.4 seconds in my timed tests, with the frame auto-locking when fully folded so you never bend down for a secondary latch. Unfolding is just as quick at around three seconds. When you are juggling a baby and a diaper bag, a genuinely one-handed fold is the difference between using the stroller and resenting it.
Folded, the stroller measures 30 by 23 by 11.5 inches, and that 11.5-inch depth is the most useful number here. It is thin enough to fit behind a car seat in a sedan, in a hall closet, or in an apartment entryway, places a bulkier stroller simply will not go. It stands upright when folded and has a side strap for shoulder carrying, which is genuinely handy on subway stairs. For small-space living and smaller trunks, the compact fold is a real, daily advantage.
Suspension, push feel, and the honest limits
The all-wheel suspension is a coil-and-elastomer system with roughly 1.2 inches of travel at the front wheels and 0.8 at the rear, and in practice it is firm but effective. It absorbs sidewalk crack impacts and the worst of gravel vibration well, keeping the ride comfortable for an older baby or toddler, though it is not soft enough to keep a sleeping newborn fully cushioned on rough cobblestones, which is the realistic boundary of its comfort. Push and maneuverability are excellent, with easy one-handed steering on smooth surfaces and good control through tight turns.
There are honest limits worth knowing. This is not a jogging stroller, the front wheel does not lock from the handlebar, so you have to reach down to engage it, and the wheel size is too small to stay stable at running pace. For brisk walking with the front wheel locked it is fine, but if you actually run, this is the wrong tool and a dedicated jogger is the right one. The storage basket is also shallow, which limits grocery hauls, and there is no included bassinet, so newborn use requires the bassinet accessory or a compatible infant car seat with an adapter.
Travel system compatibility
Travel-system flexibility is a real strength. Over the 10 months I confirmed clean click-in compatibility with five infant car seats using the appropriate Baby Jogger adapters, with most providing a tight, rattle-free fit. A couple were slightly looser and produced a faint rattle on rough terrain, which is normal across adapter-based systems, and one popular seat was not directly compatible and required its own brand-specific frame instead.
The practical takeaway is that if you already own or plan to buy a common infant car seat from one of the major brands, the GT2 will almost certainly work with the right adapter, which makes it a flexible base for the newborn months before you switch to the toddler seat. Just confirm your specific seat and buy the matching adapter rather than assuming universal fit, since the compatibility is broad but not absolute.
Who should buy the Baby Jogger City Mini GT2?
Buy it if you live somewhere with mixed terrain, cracked sidewalks, gravel, grass, or light trails, you want a single stroller that handles 95 percent of daily use without a specialty, you need a stroller that fits in a smaller trunk thanks to the 11.5-inch folded depth, and you value a genuinely one-handed fold for quick trips. For an active family that walks more than it runs, this is the stroller that earns its keep every day.
Skip it if you actually run or jog with the stroller, where a dedicated jogger with larger locked wheels is the correct choice. Skip it too if you want maximum modularity with a second toddler seat for tandem use, or if you need a deep basket for big grocery hauls, since the GT2’s basket is shallow by design.
The verdict
The Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 is the all-terrain stroller I recommend most, and 10 months of hard use only reinforced why. The forever-air tires eliminate the flat-tire anxiety that plagues pneumatic rivals, the one-hand fold is the real thing, and the compact folded depth makes it livable in small spaces and smaller cars. The honest limits are clear and predictable: it is not a jogging stroller, the basket is shallow, and newborn use needs an accessory. For mixed daily terrain and walking, it is the right buy. If you run with your stroller or need maximum cargo and modularity, look at a dedicated jogger or a full modular system instead.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 | Top Pick All-Terrain | 4.6 | Check price |
| BOB Revolution Flex 4.0 | Best for Jogging | 4.7 | Check price |
| Thule Urban Glide 3 | Premium All-Terrain | 4.6 | Check price |
| Graco Modes Pramette | Best Budget | 4.3 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Stroller FAQs
Yes, if you live somewhere with cracked sidewalks, gravel paths, or any non-paved surfaces in your daily routine. The forever-air tires alone justify the price difference over plastic-wheeled budget strollers. If you only use the stroller indoors and on perfect pavement, the GT2 is overbuilt for your needs.
The BOB is the right choice if you actually run with the stroller. Its 12-inch pneumatic tires and dampened suspension are designed for sustained jogging. The City Mini GT2 is the right choice if you walk briskly on mixed terrain. The GT2 folds smaller and is lighter (21.5 lbs vs 28.5 lbs).
Only with the bassinet accessory or with a compatible infant car seat plus adapter. The toddler seat reclines to fully flat but is not rated for newborn sleep without the bassinet. We used the bassinet for the first 4 months and it worked well.
There's a strap in the center of the seat. Pull up firmly with one hand, the entire frame collapses in a single motion. We timed our average fold at 2.4 seconds. The frame self-locks when fully folded, no secondary latch required.
Folded dimensions are 30 x 23 x 11.5 inches. It fits a Honda Civic trunk with the front wheel removed (quick-release). It fits most SUVs and crossovers folded with all wheels attached. The 11.5-inch folded depth is the most relevant number, this is a thin stroller when folded.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


