









🚪 Secure your space, hands-free and hassle-free!
The Cumbor Baby Gate is an award-winning, extra-wide safety gate extending up to 57 inches and standing 30.5 inches tall. Designed with a durable carbon steel frame and pressure-mounted installation, it offers a no-drill, damage-free setup. Featuring one-hand auto-close operation with double locks, it ensures secure, convenient access while keeping toddlers and pets safely contained. Trusted by thousands with a 4.6-star rating, it’s the smart choice for modern homes prioritizing safety and ease.








| ASIN | B08V93S74Z |
| Age range (description) | Toddler |
| Anti-Tick Material | Metal |
| Batteries required | No |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,549) |
| Date First Available | 28 January 2021 |
| Item model number | S7V2 |
| Manufacturer | Cumbor |
| Mounting type | Pressure Mount |
| Product Dimensions | 144.78 x 144.78 x 77.47 cm; 7.6 kg |
| Specific uses | baby gate dog gate for stairs |
| UPC | 860005877423 |
M**H
Great product, works as advertised. I also misplaced a part of the gate and reached out to Cumbor's customer service to purchase a replacement part. Customer service was prompt and offered to send me a replacement at no cost. That kind of above-and-beyond customer service is rare, especially for an Amazon purchase.
H**B
Wonderful for my dogs!
J**N
My rating is four for the gate, 1 for the directions and 5 for customer service. When I finally got the gate up, I was pleased. The Amazon description says its a pressure mount and easy to install. “ Pressure-Mounted Installation – No need to worry about drilling into walls or complicated installs. The pressure-mounted design makes it easy to mount our baby and dog gate without damaging walls or surfaces”. BUT, the directions say in multiple places that you have to attach cups with screws to the wall. And the provided directions provide little insight on how to use get the needed pressure to hold the gate. Amazon provides links to two install videos. They both talk about how easy it is, but don’t really show you how to do it. I was about to give up and return it, when I noticed a contact customer service link. It takes you to a form. Assuming I wouldn’t hear for days, I took a chance and filled it out at about 9pm on Tuesday night. To my amazement, I got a response in about 30 minutes. The agent asked me to send a photo of what was confusing me. I did that about 10 pm and got a rapid response. This time, they gave me enough info to figure it out. And they said I could screw the cups to the wall, or attach them with adhesive. In fact, I’m not sure you really need to use the wall cups at all. I should note that I’m a grandparent, so the gate will not be used all the time. It may be a bit of a challenge to take it down and put it back up each time the grand kids visit, but I’m pretty sure I know how now. Customer service saved the day!
C**Y
Very well made gate easy to open and close. This baby gate is very easy to install. The gate fit perfectly for where we wanted it to go.
T**S
Despite the fact that this is a nice-looking and solid gate when properly installed, I give it just 1 star because their specifications and instructions have two very serious errors that made what should have been a quick-and-simple installation into a nightmare. I wanted the 'drill' installation option because this gate is to hold back a large dog. They conveniently included a drilling template; you just hang the template on the door frame, mark the holes, and drill and screw in the cups. Piece of cake. It took me just a couple minutes to solidly install the four cups. Then I tried to install the gate into the cups. Oops. Nothing fit right, either vertically or horizontally. After scratching my head a little, I got out my tape measure, carefully laid the drilling template on the table, and measured the distance between the marked drill holes. 28 1/4 inches. Then I measured the distance between the mounting holes on the gate. 28 5/8 inches. Their drilling template was wrong by almost a half inch! How the heck did they manage that??? If you're going to include a drilling template, a nice touch, it had better be correct, right? So I had to remove the two top cups, mark the holes using my tape measure instead of their bad template, drill again, and remount the cups. Then came an even bigger nightmare, though it won't affect everyone. Their specs show that the minimum door width is 29.7 inches (though 29.5 appears in larger print several other places). Before I ordered this gate I measured my door, and it just made it: 29.75 inches. Close, but within their spec. Unfortunately, this spec does not allow for the lips on the cups. It would work (barely) if you did not use the cups. However, their instructions repeatedly state that the mounting cups are necessary, and I agree. The lip on each cup is about 1/4 inch, so really the minimum door width is closer to about 30 1/4 inches. My door was significantly too narrow for the gate to fit. Of course I had already ripped apart the shipping box, so returning it was no longer a practical option. I had to improvise. I came up with an awkward but reasonable alternative. I used heavy-duty diagonal cutters and a sharp file to trim away a semicircle of lip on each of the cups, making the edge flush with the bottom of the cups for half of the circumference. I loosened the screws enough for me to rotate the cups, and I did so in such a way that the trimmed part of each cup was facing the installation direction. This let me slip the gate into place, after which I used needle-nose pliers to rotate the cups so that the trimmed edge was facing downward, largely invisible, rather than facing out, which would allow the gate to break free. Finally, I used the pliers to hold the now loose cups in place while I tightened the gate bolts. Wow, what a mess, all because they misstated the minimum door width on their specs, and provided a drilling template that was wrong by almost a half inch. There's just no excuse for such sloppiness in a hundred-dollar gate. ADDENDUM FROM A FEW DAYS LATER: My anger at this gate continues. There are several prominent warning stickers, one bright orange. I finally got around to peeling them off for the sake of appearance. No way. The stickers are glued on with some kind of insanely strong glue so they don't readily peel off. Removing them is incredibly tedious, as they come off in little pieces that have to be individually scraped off. And they leave behind a sticky residue. Tomorrow I'll have to soak them with concentrated rubbing alcohol in the hope that it will loosen the glue enough to get the gum off. Why, why, why can't they use the same glue that's normally used for stickers that's weak enough to let them just peel off? Why do they have to use something so strong that you have to slowly chip away at them? Crazy.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago