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Children's Car Seat
Safety Guide

Even though most parents understand the need for using a car seat in their younger children, many children are still unnecessarily injured in car accidents. Among the factors that contribute to these preventable injuries are car seats used incorrectly or not used at all, children being placed in the wrong type of car seat, and moving children out of a car seat or booster and into regular seat belts at too early an age.

Car Seat Mistakes
Learn to avoid common mistakes parents make when placing their child in a car seat.

Transportation Safety Tips:

Car Seat Ease Of Use Ratings New!
Quick safety seat checkup
Where should your child ride?
How to protect your new baby in the car
What safety seat to use for a big baby or toddler?
How should preschool and school children ride safely?
Is your safety seat secure in the car?
Harness straps
What are safety seat recalls?
Air bag safety
Play it safe
Kids on the move
School bus stops
Handrails & drawstrings
Beyond the front yard

Are Your Kids LATCHed?
Learn about LATCH, or Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children, a new system to make using car seats easier and safer.

Safer Seats: Learn about the newest breed of seating systems that keep kid passengers more secure and makes installation a snap.

Booster Seats: Review why your 4 to 8 year old should be sitting in a booster seat.

General Car Seat Safety Tips:

  • All children under 12 years of age should be placed in the back seat of the car, especially if you have passenger side air bags.
  • Infants should be in a rear facing infant only seat or convertible seat until they are 1 year old and twenty pounds. Children who reach twenty pounds before their first birthday still need to face backwards and can be moved into a rear facing convertible seat.
  • After they are twenty pounds and have passed their first birthday, toddlers can use a forward facing car seat until they are about 40 pounds or their ears have reached the top of the car seat.
  • Children over forty pounds should be placed into a belt positioning booster seat.
  • You should not use your car's regular seat belts until they fit correctly when your child is about 80 pounds and is 4ft 9 inches tall.
  • Your child will not be ready to use regular seat belts until the shoulder strap fits across his shoulder and not his neck, and the lap belt fits across his hips and not his stomach.
  • Be sure to read the car seat manufacture's instructions and your car owner's manual to be sure that you are installing and using the car seat correctly.

Next page > Quick Safety Seat Checkup > Index


Car Seat Safety Internet Resources:

  • Safety: more safety tips from your Pediatrics Guide at about.com.

  • Car Seats: learn more about car seats and keeping your kids safe when they are riding in your car.

  • Car Seat Inspector: this Car Seat Inspector can help you choose a car seat and make sure that your child is riding safely in the car.

  • Family Shopping Guide to Car Seats: AAP guide to buying a car seat, with a price comparison chart of features and prices of car seats from different manufacturers

  • Car Seat Shopping Guide for Children with Special Needs: AAP Guide to finding a car seat for your child with special needs.

  • Car Seat Recalls: the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's child seat safety recall campaign listing January 1990 through present.

  • Child Passenger Safety: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's guide to car seat safety, including information on safety laws, a proper child safety seat use chart, and a one minute safety seat checklist.

  • Safety Belt Safe: get help finding the best car seat for your child, includes a frequently asked question list and a technical encyclopedia.

  • Carseat Compatibility List: a carseat compatibility list that helps you find out which carseat fits best in each car.

  • Car-Safety.Org Vehicle and Carseat Safety: Guide for parents discusses issues about child restraints and carseat safety. Read about the LATCH attachment system, tethers and features for safe cars and car seats.



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Updated: October 16, 2004

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Important disclaimer: The information on keepkidshealthy.com is for educational purposes only and should not be considered to be medical advice. It is not meant to replace the advice of the physician who cares for your child. All medical advice and information should be considered to be incomplete without a physical exam, which is not possible without a visit to your doctor.