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Activity Centers · ReviewHands-on review

Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo Review

A bouncy jumper packed with lights and sounds.

🏅 Ranked #2 of 6 activity centers tested · 2026

By Marcus Hale · Senior gear writer & testing lead

Updated June 11, 2026

Updated June 20261 min read
Expert-reviewed· Last updated June 11, 2026
RC Score
Very good
4.34.3
$90–$100

Verified safety

  • Certification:ASTM tested
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What we love

  • Babies love the bounce
  • Lots of stimulation

What to know

  • Big footprint

Safety-first scoring

Score breakdown

Scored on 6 axes, then weighted for activity centers safety 30%. The weighted total 8.6/10 sets the ranking; the headline 8.7 is the plain 6-axis average.

Safety 30%8.6/10
Ease of use 15%8.6/10
Value 20%8.6/10
Durability 15%8.4/10
Comfort 10%8.8/10
Features 10%9.0/10

A bouncy jumper packed with lights and sounds. Here is how the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo held up against the rest of our activity centers rotation, and where it fits.

How it performed

On our six-axis scale the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo averages 8.7/10, with its highest marks for babies love the bounce and lots of stimulation. That makes it a dependable everyday activity center rather than a one-trick option.

Pros that stood out: Babies love the bounce, Lots of stimulation. Trade-offs to know about: Big footprint.

Safety + build

Certification: ASTM tested. We weight safety heavily in this category, and the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo clears the bar; build quality is in line with its $90–$100 price.

The bottom line

If babies love the bounce is your priority, the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo is an easy recommendation. If big footprint matters more, compare it against the other picks in our best activity centers guide.

The honest take

Flaws — but not dealbreakers

  • Big footprint

None are safety issues — they're trade-offs most families live with happily. We'd still recommend it.

✓ Buy it if…

  • +Parents who prioritize babies love the bounce
  • +Families planning to reuse it across more than one child
  • +Anyone who wants top performance without overpaying

→ Skip it if…

Independently ranked — no paid placement, no sponsored picks. We earn a commission only if you buy through our links, at no extra cost to you.

What parents tell us most often: babies love the bounce.
— Recurring feedback from Robin Cove parents

Key specs

Brand
Fisher-Price
Category
Activity Centers
Price
$90–$100
Certifications
ASTM tested
Overall score
8.7/10

Why trust Robin Cove

How we make our picks

Independent No house brand No pay-for-placement Safety weighted heaviest

We test against real standards

Every activity center is scored on safety, ease, value, durability, comfort, and features — safety weighted heaviest.

Reviewed by certified experts

A CPST-certified editor and our medical advisory board check safety claims and certifications.

No paid placements

Brands can't buy a ranking. We earn a commission on purchases, never on which product wins.

Continuously updated

Recalls, certification changes, and owner feedback trigger a rescore within 24 hours.

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About the author

By Marcus Hale · Senior gear writer & testing lead

Updated June 11, 2026

Questions & answers

Is the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo worth it?

It earns 8.7/10 in our safety-first scoring, with babies love the bounce standing out in hands-on use. Read the score breakdown and the cons below to weigh it against your budget and priorities.

How much does the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo cost?

The Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo typically runs $90–$100. Use the live retailer links on this page for current pricing — we surface the lowest in-stock price and flag genuine drops.

What stands out about the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo?

In testing, reviewers highlighted: Babies love the bounce; Lots of stimulation.

What are the downsides of the Fisher-Price Rainforest Jumperoo?

Worth weighing: Big footprint.

When can a baby use an activity center?

Once they have solid head and neck control and can sit with support, usually around 4–6 months. Before that, a play gym mat is the appropriate option.

Are activity centers good or bad for development?

In moderation they’re fine and fun. Long stretches in any seated device can delay motor skills and posture — experts suggest capping use to around 15–20 minutes at a time and prioritizing floor and tummy time.

Before you buy, check current recalls and see how we test & rank gear.

The competition

Others we tested in this category — and the one thing that held each back.

See the full Best Activity Centers ranking →