Car seat rules for babies are generally pretty simple. They pretty much need one. Now, obviously, there are questions -- do they sit in the middle or side? Do they need to be backward or forward? Are convertible seats or bucket seats safer? -- but in general, baby car safety has less variables and less room for error than car seats for older kids.
In recent years, it also seems like car seat rules are changing more rapidly. Many states are raising the height and weight limits for kids in car seats, while it can also be daunting to shop for an older child in a car seat. Do you go high back? Do you go low? How much should it be?
When we are pregnant, we have the time to pore over Consumer Reports and stay current on all the news. We have baby showers and opportunities to speak with experts who are current on all things baby and safety. But as our kids grow, it becomes harder and harder to stay on top of the rules, especially as our older kids fight us on them.
"I can count on one hand the number of times I have seen parents install the seat correctly from the beginning," says Kit Orloff, a certified children's car seat technician who has appeared on numerous morning news shows as well as ABC's Extreme Makeover: Home Edition as a child safety expert.
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To her -- and many other safety experts -- the number of mistakes parents make when seating older children is astounding. After spending five weeks with the Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), she found only two seats had been installed correctly. Scary, indeed.
Here are 10 of the most common mistakes and misconceptions experts say parents have about car seats and older kids right now:
- Girls and boys are the same: "Girls are more susceptible to higher injury and death than boys because they don’t develop their pelvic and pubic bones until adolescence," says Orloff. As the mom of a 5-year-old girl, I was surprised to learn this, but I am glad I know it now.
- Sleeping is fine in a booster: "The seat belt should be on the shoulder not on the neck. It should sit across the hip bones and not on the belly," says Amanda Adams, a prevention specialist at Sullivan County, New York's Board of Cooperative Educational Services. As we all know, when a child falls asleep in the car, they move out of position and the seat belt is likely to cut across the neck or belly or, even worse, slip under them so only their bottom half is strapped in to the seat.
- All boosters are the same: A high back booster is much, much safer, says Allana Pinkerton, the Child Passenger Safety Technician for Diono, a well-known car seat manufacturer. The high back offers seat belt positioning, which is the single most important part of any booster. If a child is going to fall asleep or move around, they shouldn't be in a low back booster. "People need to stop being afraid of a seat that is heavier," Orloff says. In an accident, a heavier seat offers more protection.
- Use the 5-point harness as long as you can: This is especially dangerous thinking in combination seats like the Britax Frontier or the Diono Radian. Both are highly rated seats, but they need to be used correctly. There is a weight limit for using the 5-point harness and after that, Pinkerton says, it is safer to use the seat belt.
- Saying it's OK "just this once": "The general rule is a 5-point harness is better than a 3-point one and a high back is better than a booster and a booster is better than not having one," says Pinkerton. It's true. Even if you carry a $20 booster from Wal-Mart for carpooling, it's better than nothing, Pinkerton says. "Just because a child says, 'I don't have to do this in my car' is not a reason to not enforce your rules. You CAN say, 'Well, I am sorry, but in my car this is the rule.'"
- Not reading the car manual: Obviously people read the car seat manual (right? right?), but they don't always read the car one. The car also has weight limits and should always be consulted when installing any seat.
- Trusting the LATCH anchors: The LATCH anchors (Lower Anchor and Tethers) that have been required in cars since 2001 are great. To a point. When a child and a seat have a combined weight of 65 pounds, the safety cannot be guaranteed. As of 2014, car seat makers will no longer be able to recommend that parents DO use them. Keep track of your child's weight combined with the car seat. It might save his or her life.
- Letting kids decide: The fact is, some kids might turn 12 before they reach 80 pounds. “You might have a 10-year-old who is 60 pounds," Pinkerton says. Unfortunately, they are going to have to suck it up and stay in the booster, annoying as it may seem. It does matter for their safety, and if you bend on the rule once, it's all over.
- Putting the baby in the middle: It used to be that when you had older children and a baby, the baby always got the middle. In fact, that is wrong, says Orloff. With older kids on the sides, their heads can move forward quit a bit. "We don’t want their heads colliding with someone else’s head," says Orloff. "The outboard position with infants is not something we worry as much about anymore."
Do you make any of these errors?


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Comments 65
I am fairly well versed in car seat safety, and I really do not understand their reasoning behind the "baby not in the middle." What we have always been told is that the middle is the safest spot, so the least protected passenger goes there.
I think with a baby in a rear facing seat, they are pretty protected. The seat goes all the way around them and their head is inside the seat. With a child in a booster, their head and body are more exposed, so in a side impact crash they have a higher risk of head inury from hitting the window of the car or the side of the car, espeically if there are no side impact air bags. I think this article is misleading. The point should be to know the limits of your seat and follow all the directions. For example, you should keep your children in the 5 point harness as long as you can WITHIN THE WEIGHT LIMITS OF YOUR SEAT! Keeping them in longer than they can be based on your seat would be irresponsible. But you can't say that it is a car seat mistake to keep them in the harness as long as you can, KWIM?
I don't understand the author's reasoning for why the baby shouldn't be in the middle, her reason sounds ridiculous. But the point is valid. The middle seat in the rear of the car is the safest in the whole vehicle and should be reserved for the least protected passenger. An infant/toddler/preschooler rearfacing is the safest and should not be in the middle.
Car seat safety is extremely important, and the lack of education on the matter appalls me. My almost 4 year old just turned FF a few months ago, and only because she reached the weight limit on her seat and I couldn't afford a new one that RF longer than 35 pounds. Her seat harnesses to 50 pounds FF, and she will NOT be put in a booster with a seat belt until she hits that or surpasses the height limit. My 2 1/2 yr old is rear facing at 35inches and 28 pounds. "Broken leg=cast it, Broken neck=casket"
The4Mutts: Please stop being an internet troll. Every blurb on here, you're more and more defensive and confrontational. It's getting old.
This article needs some revision.
First off, LATCH weight limits are determined by the vehicle or the car seat. Read the manuals to educate yourself. NOT all of them are 65 pounds limited.
Secondly, the MOST VULNERABLE child should go in the middle. The vulnerability goes something like this, from least vulnerable to most vulnerable: rear-facing child, forward facing with harness, forward with high back booster and belt, forward with low back booster, forward with belt only. So, obviously, you would put a boostered child in the middle and a rear facing baby outboard, if practical. Proper installation, however, is more important than position in the car.
Third, your wording on "A high back booster is much much safer..." can be misconstrued. It is not much safer than a harnessed child, or rear facing. It should read: A high back booster is much safer than a low back for an age and weight appropriate child.
Fourth, yes you SHOULD use the harness as long as you can, with PROPER usage. If your kid has reached the limit, take them out and belt them.
More research, hun, before you go putting out your "findings." Car seat safety is nothing to be vague about.
@Khelly, that's because it's car seat specific. Some seats require the handle to be up. Some seats are safe with the handle either up or down. And some seats require the handle to be down. You have to read your car seat's instruction booklet to know. Not all parents who leave up the handle are idiots, some are just following the safety guidelines.
http://www.thecarseatlady.com/car_seats/rear-facing_seats_10.html
i have a 6 month old and she sits behind the front passenger seat cause i was always told that they are safer on the side farthest from the opposite side of the road where the other cars are but she is longer then her infant car seat should i go ahead and get a RFing high back booster seat? . . . and i agree i know alot of ppl who doesnt put handles down on the infant cars seats and thats a mistake in its self