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Guides & Tips11 mai 2026·8 min de lecture

Mothair vs Nanit Pro: The complete comparison 2026 for new parents

Under-mattress sensor vs height camera: Mothair and Nanit Pro don't have the same approach. Complete comparison on price, heart rate, AI, and installation

Why this comparison is important

Baby monitors have evolved significantly — and so have their prices. The Nanit Pro has built a solid reputation among parents who want a smart camera at height. Mothair takes a radically different approach: a under-mattress sensor that tracks your baby's breathing, heart rate, and movements without a camera, portable accessory, or any contact with their skin.

Same goal, very different methods. And depending on what you really need, the right choice isn't obvious. This comparison details how each monitor works, what it costs, and which one best fits your family in 2026.

How does each monitor work?

How Mothair works

Mothair is an ultra-thin sensor that slips between the mattress and your baby's sheet. Nothing touches your baby. No camera, no bracelet, no repeated manipulation at each bedtime.

Once in place, it connects to the Mothair app via Bluetooth and Wi-Fi and starts measuring respiratory rate, heart activity, and movements at every nap and night. The AI builds a personalized baseline for your baby — the more you use it, the more precise and specific the analysis is to your child.

After each sleep session, you receive a structured night report. Notifications only arrive when something really deviates from your baby's usual behavior.

How the Nanit Pro works

The Nanit Pro is mounted above the baby's bed in the form of a height camera. It tracks breathing via a dedicated accessory — the Breathing Wear — a band or onesie with patterns that the camera reads visually. Without this accessory, respiratory tracking is not available.

The app provides sleep reports, video images, and general sleep analysis. Heart rate tracking is not part of the device. Some parents appreciate the aerial view; others prefer to avoid any camera in the room.

What each monitor actually measures

This is where the two products diverge most clearly.

Mothair measures:

  • Respiratory rate (continuously, without required accessory)
  • Heart rate (absent from Nanit Pro)
  • Movements and sleep cycles
  • A global well-being score based on your baby's personal baseline
  • Week-to-week trends

The Nanit Pro measures:

  • Breathing (requires Breathing Wear accessory)
  • Movements and sleep cycles
  • Room temperature and humidity (depending on the offer)
  • Live video with night vision

Heart rate is the most significant difference. If this data matters to you — and it does for many parents — the Nanit Pro can't provide it. Mothair measures heart activity as standard at every session, without additional accessories.

Installation and daily use

Setting up the Nanit Pro involves wall or stand mounting, cable management, and precise positioning above the bed. It's a one-time operation, but not quick. A move, bed change, or transition to a crib means redoing the process.

Mothair slips under the sheet. That's it. No tools, no visible equipment, no reconfiguration. If your baby changes sleep spaces, the sensor moves with them in seconds.

When you're already running on fragmented nights, the difference between a five-minute and thirty-minute installation is much greater than it seems.

Price comparison: what you actually pay

The Nanit Pro costs between $399 and $499, depending on the offer, plus $5 to $25/month for full features. You own the hardware — which seems like an advantage until you realize how quickly baby technology becomes outdated and how expensive it is to resell.

Mothair works on a subscription with no initial cost. €29.90/month. The device is delivered, updated, and returned when your baby no longer needs it.

Over 12 months, the Nanit Pro costs around $450–$550 all-in. Mothair represents around €360 over the same period, without hardware to store, sell, or dispose of.

AI and personalization

The Nanit Pro offers sleep advice content and general analysis based on population data. It's really useful — but it's not specific to your baby.

Mothair builds a baseline unique to your child. From the first hours of use, it learns to recognize what's normal for them. Each nap enriches this picture. Over time, the analysis is calibrated to your baby's habits — not a generic average from thousands of other infants.

Unusual respiratory rates for one baby are perfectly normal for another. Generic thresholds generate more false alerts. Personalization reduces this issue.

Alerts and notifications

The Nanit Pro triggers alerts based on generic thresholds — standard ranges for movement, sound, and respiratory anomalies.

Mothair sends a discreet notification only when a deviation is detected from your baby's personal baseline. Because the AI knows what's normal for your child, it's less likely to signal something that's not really concerning — and more likely to detect something that is.

Fewer unnecessary alerts mean you stay attentive to the ones that matter.

Family sharing and pediatrician access

Both monitors allow both parents, grandparents, and close relatives to access data via family sharing.

Mothair goes further by integrating access for the pediatrician. You can share week-to-week trends directly with your baby's doctor — the kind of longitudinal tracking that's usually impossible to bring to a consultation.

Who is Mothair for?

Mothair is probably the best choice if:

  • Heart rate tracking matters to you, in addition to breathing and movements
  • You prefer not to have a camera in your baby's room
  • You want a monitor that learns your baby's specific habits
  • A monthly subscription is more suitable than a $400+ purchase
  • Installation simplicity is a priority
  • You want to share health trends with your pediatrician
  • You're in the first 1,000 days and want monitoring that evolves with your baby

Who is the Nanit Pro for?

The Nanit Pro is more suited if:

  • Live video from the baby's bed is important to you
  • You've already planned a $400+ purchase
  • You're comfortable with a camera installation at height
  • Heart rate tracking is not a priority
  • You prefer to own the hardware rather than subscribe

FAQ — Mothair vs Nanit Pro

Does Mothair require contact with my baby's skin?No. The sensor slips between the mattress and the sheet. Nothing touches your baby at any time.

Can the Nanit Pro track heart rate?No. The Nanit Pro covers breathing (via the Breathing Wear accessory), movements, and sleep cycles. Heart rate is not included. Mothair tracks heart rate as standard.

How do the prices compare?The Nanit Pro costs $399–$499 to purchase, plus a monthly subscription. Mothair starts at €29.9/month, device included.

Is Mothair compatible with iOS and Android?Yes. The Mothair app is available on both platforms.

What happens to the device when my baby no longer needs it?You return it. The subscription covers delivery and return at the end of use — nothing to sell, store, or dispose of.

Can I share Mothair data with my baby's doctor?Yes. Family sharing includes the ability to give your pediatrician access to your baby's sleep and health data.

Is Mothair available outside of France?Mothair is currently in pre-launch. Check mothair.fr for the latest availability information and pre-ordering.

Conclusion

The Nanit Pro is a good camera monitor. If live video is what you're looking for, it delivers. But if you want heart rate tracking, installation in seconds, AI that learns your baby specifically, and access that doesn't start with a $400 commitment — Mothair is the solid choice for 2026.

These two monitors don't quite solve the same problem. The Nanit Pro lets you see your baby. Mothair helps you understand how your baby is doing, night after night, without disturbing them or taking more of your sleep than you've already lost.

If you're in your third trimester or in the first weeks after birth, this decision deserves thought. Discover what Mothair offers on mothair.fr.