For the best possible protection keep infants in the back seat, in rear-facing child safety seats, as long as possible up to the height or weight limit of the particular seat. At a minimum, keep infants rear-facing until a minimum of age 1 and at least 20 pounds.
Always read the child seat instruction manual. Each manufacturer provides specific instructions regarding proper use and installation of their child seats.
When children outgrow their rear-facing seats (at a minimum age 1 and at least 20 pounds) they should ride in forward-facing child safety seats, in the back seat, until they reach the upper weight or height limit of the particular seat (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds).
Always read the child seat instruction manual. Each manufacturer provides specific instructions regarding proper use and installation of their child seats.
Once children outgrow their forward-facing seats (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds), they should ride in booster seats, in the back seat, until the vehicle seat belts fit properly. Seat belts fit properly when the lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest (usually at age 8 or when they are 4’9” tall).
Always read the child seat instruction manual. Each manufacturer provides specific instructions regarding proper use and installation of their child seats.
When children outgrow their booster seats, (usually at age 8 or when they are 4’9” tall) they can use the adult seat belt in the back seat, if it fits properly (lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest).
Remember: All children younger than 13 years should ride in the back seat. Never place a child in the front seat facing an airbag.
~NHTSA.gov
One of the most important jobs you have as a parent is keeping your child safe when riding in a vehicle. Each year thousands of young children are killed or injured in car crashes. Proper use of car safety seats helps keep children safe. But with so many different car safety seats on the market, it’s no wonder many parents find this overwhelming.
The type of seat your child needs depends on several things including age, size, and type of vehicle. To be sure your child is using the most appropriate seat, read on.
Types of car safety seats at a glance
The chart below is a quick guide to where to start your search. Once you’ve found your car safety seat, it’s important to read more about the seat in this guide.
|
Age |
Type of Seat |
General Guideline |
|
Infants |
Infant-only and rear-facing convertible |
All infants should always ride rear-facing until they are 1 year of age and weigh at least 20 pounds. |
|
Toddlers Preschoolers |
Children 1 year of age and at least 20 pounds can ride forward-facing. It is best to ride rear-facing as long as possible. |
|
|
School-aged children |
Booster seats are for older children who have outgrown their forward-facing car safety seats. Children should stay in a booster seat until the adult seat belts fit correctly (usually when a child reaches about 4' 9" in height and is between 8 and 12 years of age). |
|
|
Older children |
Children who have outgrown their booster seats should ride in a lap and shoulder belt; they should ride in the back seat until 13 years of age. |
The right car safety seat
Infants-rear-facing
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that all infants should ride rear-facing starting with their first ride home from the hospital until they have reached at least 1 year of age and weigh at least 20 pounds. It is even better for them to ride rear-facing until they reach the highest weight or height allowed by their car safety seat’s manufacturer.
There are 2 types of rear-facing car safety seats: infant-only seats and convertible seats.
|
|
Convertible seats (used rear-facing)

Installation tips for rear-facing seats
When using a rear-facing seat, keep the following in mind:
Common questions
Q: What if my baby weighs
more than 20 pounds but is not 1 year old yet?
A:Use a seat that can be used rear-facing by children who weigh more than
20 pounds and keep your baby rear-facing as long as possible, or at least until
he has reached his first birthday.
Q: What do I do if my
baby slouches down or to the side in his car safety seat?
A: Pad around your child (never under or behind)
with rolled-up cloth diapers or blankets. Do not use any sort of car safety seat
insert unless it came with the seat or was made by the manufacturer of the seat.
Q: Can I adjust the
straps when my baby is wearing thicker clothing, like in the winter?
A: Yes, but make sure the harnesses are still snug. Also remember to
tighten the straps again after the thicker clothes are no longer needed. Dress
your baby in thinner layers instead of a bulky coat or snowsuit, and tuck a
blanket around your baby over the buckled harness straps if needed.
Q: Are rear-facing convertible seats OK to use for preemies?
A: Premature infants should be tested while still in the hospital to make
sure they can ride safely in a reclined position. Babies who need to lie flat
during travel should ride in a crash-tested car bed. Very small infants who can
ride safely in a reclined position usually fit better in infant-only seats;
however, if you need to use a convertible seat, choose one without a tray-shield
or T-shield harness. The shields often are too big and too far from the body to
fit correctly.
Toddlers and preschoolers-forward-facing
Once your child is at least 1 year of age and weighs at least 20 pounds, she can ride forward-facing. However, it is best for her to ride rear-facing to the highest weight or height allowed by the manufacturer of her car safety seat. She should ride in a forward-facing seat with a harness until she outgrows it (usually at around 4 years of age and about 40 pounds).
There are 5 types of car safety seats that can be used forward-facing.
|
|
Installation tips for forward-facing seats
Make sure the car safety seat is installed tightly in the vehicle and that the harness fits the child snugly.
To switch a convertible seat from rear-facing to forward-facing,
A tether is a strap that attaches to the top of a car safety seat and to an anchor point in your vehicle (see your owner’s manual to find where the tether anchors are in your vehicle). Tethers give extra protection by keeping the car safety seat and the child’s head from moving too far forward in a crash or sudden stop. All new cars, minivans, and light trucks have been required to have tether anchors since September 2000. New forward-facing car safety seats come with tethers. For older seats, tether kits are available. Check with the car safety seat manufacturer to find out how you can get a tether if your seat does not have one.
Common questions
Q: What if I drive more
children than can be buckled safely in the back seat?
A: It’s best to avoid this, especially if your vehicle has air bags in
the front seat. All children younger than 13 years should ride in the back seat.
If absolutely necessary, a child in a forward-facing car safety seat with a
harness may be the best choice to ride in front. Just be sure the vehicle seat
is moved as far back away from the dashboard (and the air bag) as possible.
Q: What do I need to know
if my child will be driven by someone else, such as for child care or school?
A: If your child is being driven by someone else, make sure
Child care programs and schools should have written guidelines for transporting children. These guidelines should include the following:
Q: Should my child ride
in a car safety seat on an airplane?
A: Most infant, convertible, and forward-facing seats can be used on
airplanes, but booster seats and travel vests cannot. The Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) and the AAP recommend that when flying, children should be
securely fastened in certified child restraints until 4 years of age, and then
should be secured with the airplane seat belts. This will help keep them safe
during takeoff and landing or in case of turbulence. Check the label on your car
safety seat or call the car safety seat manufacturer before you travel to see if
your seat is certified for use on an airplane. You can also consider using a
restraint made only for use on airplanes and approved by the FAA.
School-aged children-booster seats
Ohio is the newest state to adopt a booster seat law to protect kids who have outgrown a harnessed car seat but are not yet ready for an adult seatbelt. Real life crash data has shown that kids in the four to seven age range are not well protected by adult seatbelts alone. Ohio's new booster seat law is pretty standard - kids ages four through seven who are less than 4'9" tall must ride in a federally approved booster seat. The law goes into effect on April 6, 2009. There are now fewer than ten U.S. states that do not have a booster seat law.
Children through age 15 must wear a seat belt or be secured in an appropriate child restraint system.
Booster seats are for older children who have outgrown their forward-facing car safety seats. A child has outgrown his forward-facing seat when one of the following is true:
|
|
Booster seats are designed to raise the child up so that the lap and shoulder seat belts fit properly. High-back and backless booster seats are available. They do not come with harness straps but are used with the lap and shoulder seat belts in your vehicle, the same way an adult rides. Booster seats should be used until your child can correctly fit in lap and shoulder seat belts. Booster seats typically include a plastic clip or guide to help ensure the correct use of the vehicle lap and shoulder belts. See the instruction booklet that came with the booster seat for directions on how to use the guide or clip.
Installation tips for booster seats
Booster seats must be used with a lap and shoulder belt (never a lap-only belt). When using a booster seat, make sure
Common questions
Q: What if my car only
has lap belts in the back seat?
A: Lap belts work fine with infant-only, convertible, and forward-facing
seats. They cannot be used with booster seats. If your car only has lap belts,
use a forward-facing car safety seat with a harness and higher weight limits.
Other options are
Q: Is there a difference
between high-back and backless boosters?
A: Both types of boosters are designed to raise your child so the seat
belts fit properly. High-back boosters are useful in vehicles that do not have
head rests or have low seat backs. Many seats that look like high-back boosters
are actually combination seats. They come with harnesses that can be used for
smaller children and can then be removed for older children. Backless boosters
are usually less expensive and are easier to move from vehicle to vehicle.
Backless boosters can safely be used in vehicles with head rests and high seat
backs.
Seat belts are made for adults. Your child should stay in a booster seat until adult seat belts fit correctly (usually when the child reaches about 4' 9" in height and is between 8 and 12 years of age). This means
Other points to keep in mind when using seat belts include
Car seat safety advocates recommend that Ohioans follow one of the following guidelines:
If your child resists using a belt-positioning booster, experts recommend the following:
**A growing number of states are requiring children as old as 8 years to sit in booster seats. The concern is that without such a seat, regular seat belts can pose a risk of abdominal or spinal-cord injuries. Ohio's legislators have considered a booster-seat law but have not passed one. Booster seats raise the child and use loops and guides to keep the belt resting properly across the child's lap and shoulders. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recommends booster seats until the child is 8 years old unless they are 4feet 9inches. Height is more important than weight at this age for proper fit of the shoulder and lap belts.
**Children under the age of 12 years should not sit in the front seat of a car with passenger side air bags. The safest place for all children to ride is in the back seat.
Common Questions
Q: I’ve seen products
that say they can help make the seat belt fit better. Should we get one of
these?
A: No, these products should not be used. In fact, they may actually
interfere with proper seat belt fit by causing the lap belt to ride too high on
the stomach and making the shoulder belt too loose. They can even damage the
seat belt. This rule applies to car safety seats too; do not use any extra
products unless they came with the seat. There are no federal safety standards
for these products and until there are, the AAP does not recommend they be used.
As long as children are riding in the correct restraint for their size and age,
they should not need to use any additional devices.
Shopping for car safety seats
When shopping for a car safety seat, keep the following tips in mind:
If you are unsure, call the manufacturer of the seat. See “Manufacturer phone numbers and Web sites” below for manufacturer contact information.
Installing car safety seats correctly
What you should know about air bags
All new cars come with front air bags. When used with seat belts, air bags work very well to protect teenagers and adults. However, air bags can be very dangerous to children, particularly those riding in rear-facing car safety seats and to child passengers who are not properly positioned. If your vehicle has a front passenger air bag, infants in rear-facing seats must ride in the back seat. Even in a relatively low-speed crash, the air bag can inflate, strike the car safety seat, and cause serious brain and neck injury and death.
Vehicles with no back seat or a back seat that is not made for passengers are not the best choice for traveling with small children. However, the air bag can be turned off in some of these vehicles if the front seat is needed for a child passenger. See your vehicle owner’s manual for more information.
Side air bags
Side air bags improve safety for adults in side-impact crashes. Read your vehicle owner’s manual for more information about the air bags in your vehicle. Read your car safety seat manual for guidance on placing the seat next to a side air bag.
LATCH
LATCH (Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children) is an attachment system that eliminates the need to use seat belts to secure the car safety seat. Vehicles with the LATCH system have anchors located in the back seat. Car safety seats that come with LATCH have attachments that fasten to these anchors. Nearly all passenger vehicles and all car safety seats made on or after September 1, 2002, come with LATCH. However, unless both your vehicle and the car safety seat have this anchor system, you will still need to use seat belts to install the car safety seat.
If you need installation help
If you have questions or need help installing your car safety seat, find a certified CPS Technician. A list of certified CPS Technicians is available by state or ZIP code on the NHTSA Web site at www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/childps/contacts. A list of inspection stations—where you can go to learn how to correctly install a car safety seat—is available in English and Spanish at www.seatcheck.org or toll-free at 866/SEATCHECK (866/732-8243). You can also get this information by calling the toll-free NHTSA Auto Safety Hotline at 888/DASH-2-DOT (888/327-4236) from 8:00 am to 10:00 pm ET, Monday through Friday.
Important reminders
Photographs courtesy of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Copyright © 2008 American
FREE CARSEAT CHECKUPS ARE OFFERED AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:
Rainbow Babies and Children Hospital 11100 Euclid Ave. Mon-Thurs Noon to 3pm Call 216-844-2277 for an appointment.
BrookPark Fire Station 17401 Holland Rd. Third Wednesday of each month, 4:30 to 8:30 pm. Call 216-433-1215 for an appointment.
Fairview Hospital 18101 Lorain Rd. First Sunday of each month, 1 to 5 pm. Call 216-476-0200 for an appointment.
Five star Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep dealerships. Open to all vehicle makes. To find a dealer, call 1-877-348-4254 or go to www.fitforakid.org.