Compare Kids Backpacks
Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack scores higher on safety - here's why.
R3 scored the adidas Excel 6 Backpack 6.1/10 and the Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack 8.3/10 on the same kids backpacks scoring system, weighing safety, efficacy, and usability. The Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack comes out ahead, led by its safety score (8.2/10 vs 6.1/10).
The most important dimensions, side by side.
See which one actually scores higher — and why
Free account unlocks full safety scores, spec-by-spec breakdown, and the R3 verdict on adidas Excel 6 Backpack vs Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack.
Unlock the full adidas Excel 6 Backpack vs Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack breakdown
Free account unlocks all safety scores, complete spec comparison, scoring rationale, and the R3 verdict on which one to buy.
Everything you need to make the call - who each one is for, and who should skip it.
Go for it if you...
You want a pack with independent lab proof that it is free of forever chemicals, the chemical concern parents ask about most
You are shopping for an older kid, a teen, or an adult who needs a roomy 40 liter everyday pack
You prefer a recycled polyester shell at a mainstream price of about forty dollars
You want the lowest-chemical-exposure daypack for a preschool or early-grade child and value bluesign-verified PVC and phthalate-free construction
You want a featherweight pack, about 308 grams empty, so almost all of the carry budget goes to what your child actually packs
You want full load support sized for a small child: padded adjustable straps, a structured back panel, and a chest strap that keeps the pack from swinging
You want a durable, warranty-backed pack you can hand down rather than replace every school year
The main thing to know
An independent lab confirmed this pack is free of forever chemicals, which is the hardest thing to get right. It lands in the middle only because Adidas discloses little else: the hardware is untested for lead, the 40 liter size sits outside the strict children's-product rule, and PVC and phthalate content is not stated.
This is the cleanest kids backpack we scored on chemicals, but two of its assurances rest on disclosure rather than an independent lab test on this exact pack. The forever-chemical-free claim comes from Deuter and the bluesign program, not from a lab that tested the Kikki, and the lead in the hardware rests on the federal children's-product limit rather than a published Deuter test result.
Skip this if you...
You need a child-sized pack covered by the strict federal lead rule for children's products
You want published lead-free and PVC-free testing on the zippers, buckles, and trim before you buy
Your child needs a structured padded back panel and a hip or chest strap for heavier daily loads
You will only buy a pack with its own independent forever-chemical lab result; this exact model has not been lab-tested for fluorine
You want a published lead-free test on the zippers and hardware rather than reliance on the federal children's-product limit
You need a full hip or waist belt to carry heavier loads, since this pack stops at a chest strap
Neither of these quite what you're looking for?
I've reviewed all Kids Backpacks options at every price pointEvery Kids Backpacks in our database is scored using R3's deterministic scoring system - the same inputs always produce the same score. For this comparison, we evaluated adidas and Deuter across 3 independent criteria: Safety (94%), Efficacy (5%), Usability (1%). No sponsored rankings. No paid placements.
Straight answers - no sponsored content, no filler.
I'd start with Deuter Deuter Kikki Kids' Backpack - it scored 8.3/10 overall in our scoring system. Safety is our top-weighted scoring pillar, followed by efficacy, and usability. Check which pillar matters most to your family and compare those specific scores.
R3 uses a deterministic scoring system - the same inputs always produce the same score. We evaluate each Kids Backpacks across Safety, Efficacy, Usability using independently verified data. No sponsored rankings. No paid placements. Every score is fully reproducible.
Not necessarily. The overall score reflects how we weight those three pillars, but your priorities may differ. If you care most about safety, compare the safety scores directly. If budget drives your decision, the prices tell a clearer story. The "right" pick is the one that matches what matters most to your family.
Not the right match? Explore these alternatives in the same category.