The Keekaroo Peanut is a well-known premium changing pad, but at $169.95 it is the most expensive option in this comparison — and it lacks both a safety harness and a non-slip base. Its Dura-Soft material also has documented furniture-staining issues worth knowing about before you buy.

The Keekaroo's Dura-Soft material contains plasticizers that can migrate into wood surfaces over time, leaving permanent stains on dressers and changing tables. This is a well-documented issue across Amazon reviews, parenting forums (DCUrbanMom, Reddit), and Amazon Q&A threads. Many Keekaroo owners are advised to place a barrier (towel, mat) underneath the pad to protect their furniture. The Upseat Changing Pad has no such reports.
Multiple Amazon Q&A responses and reviews confirm that new Keekaroo units have a noticeable chemical smell that requires several days of airing out before use. For a product that will be in direct contact with a newborn's skin, this is a meaningful concern — particularly given the lack of a non-toxic material certification.
Light-colored Keekaroo units (vanilla, yellow) are widely reported to yellow over time — a cosmetic issue that cannot be reversed. This is a known characteristic of the Dura-Soft material formulation. Dark colors (espresso, slate) are less affected but still susceptible.
"Love the concept but it stained my white dresser permanently. There is a well-known issue with this pad leaching chemicals into wood furniture. Wish I had known before buying."
"The Keekaroo is really firm — my baby cried every time I put her on it. Switched to the Upseat and she's totally calm now. Night and day difference in comfort."
"Smelled strongly of chemicals when it arrived. Had to air it out for several days before I felt comfortable putting my newborn on it. For $170 I expected better."
"The Keekaroo left a permanent mark on my dresser. I've seen this complaint many times — you need to put a barrier underneath it or it will damage your furniture."
The Keekaroo Peanut is a well-built pad with a good wipe-clean surface and strong durability. However, at $169.95 it is the most expensive option here — and it lacks both a safety harness and a non-slip base. Its documented furniture-staining and off-gassing issues are genuine concerns. The Upseat Changing Pad offers more features, better safety, non-toxic certification, and a lifetime warranty at $50 less.