This was posted 1 year 10 months 2 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Huggies Ultra Dry Nappies Boy Size 3 (6-11kg) 176-Count $52.80 ($44.88 Prime & S&S) Delivered @ Amazon AU

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$0.26 per nappy with Prime Subscribe $ Save.

While nowhere near historical lows, still much more tolerable than recent price hikes.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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  • +8

    Prime day is coming 12 July. Hoping they offer a bigger discount then so I can stock up. Thanks for posting the unit price.

  • ALDI nappies are $0.20 per nappy and made in Australia. These Huggies are made in China.

    • +14

      While ALDI nappies are okay, they have significantly worse absorbency and are wet inside when full, which is not the case with Huggies

      • -1

        agreed, although I think pampers is better of them.

        • +3

          Really ? The German made ones I got from Amazon were paper thin. Worse than home brands. I find little ones from Woolworths are good value for money.

      • +4

        I’ve found Huggies are the best bet for the first year when they pee every 2 seconds. After that, Aldi is the way to go.

        • +1

          we use huggies when baby sleep and goin out for shopping) , best among all, and, yes, it is made in china, but better than made in other countries

          follow up with little ones fromi woolies daily use

      • Depends on poo explosivity of your child and urination volume overnight, huggies do a better job overall but if Mamia are doing the job, definitely do not switch!

      • We bought some ALDI nappies and can kind of get away with them during the day, but definitely cannot get away with them overnight. Only Huggies have consistently got through the night without leaks.

    • +3

      ALDI nappies are $0.20 per nappy and made in Australia

      ALDI ones are ok for day time and do fine for about 4 hours, for night time you do need Huggies

    • Found aldi to be the worst of all, stink of chemicals and leave a rash.

      • No smells or rashes here m8

      • Found aldi to be the worst of all, stink of chemicals and leave a rash.

        not my experience

  • +2

    I will subscribe and save for my perpetually 6kg baby.

    • Up to to 11kg baby ;)

  • +2

    Have been using Huggies since birth (hospital provided) but recently tried Babylove and also Rascal and Friends and have realised Huggies aren't that great. Better than Mammia and low end but not good value for money.

    Would suggest parents try Rascal and Friends from Coles which is on sale this week too. 90 jumbo pack for $18.90 (21c each) better and easier fit, more absorbent, better materials

    https://shop.coles.com.au/a/macquarie-park/product/rascal-fr…

    • +1

      Tried Baby love and they performed worse than Huggies. Thank you, will try Rascal and Friends to see how they are in comparison

  • +1

    I am using Huggies Ultimate nappies size 3 for my baby in night time. My baby wakes up all dry in the morning (after 11-12hours). For daytime, I use Huggies normal nappies (good if we change it every 6-7 hours).

    Would highly recommend Huggies Ultimate for the nights, even if pricey.

  • +1

    Start potty training from 3 months and save in lots of nappy useage
    Can also use reuseable nappies if you are ok with cleaning them regularly

    Helps cut down on a lot of nappy use
    I still buy the big boxes of huggies but they last me a lot longer than it would otherwise

    • can confirm, baby vietbargain has undergone potty training from around 4 months. still get a few false positives and wet nappies, but she can do 1's and 2's about 80% of the time that I put her on the toilet

    • Where did you learn how to train from 3 months? Mine is that age and I would have thought I was no where near even starting!

      • That's how it's done in Nam

      • +3

        Probably worth mentioning that it's much less toilet training and more "toilet timing". So it's very parent driven, about the parents recognising the kids cues and the times that it's ready to go, plus eventually having them realise that nappy off = strain and get praised. It's quite common in Asian culture, but it's obviously not nearly the same thing as what a 2 year old might do for example. The utility of it is also a lot lower, since it's not like you can just leave your 3 month old without a nappy for a few hours while at the shops and expect them to be dry consistently. Obviously toilet timing does lead to earlier toilet training though.

        Also the younger the age of the child generally the more sustained parenting effort is required is to toilet train them.

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