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READ the seat instruction manual AND the safety belt/seat section in your vehicle manual for proper installation guidance. (Missing manuals? Contact the manufacturers) Children should always ride in the back seat.
All children must use a car seat, booster seat or seat belt. My child always rides in a back seat and never in front of an airbag. Everyone in my car buckles up on every ride using the right car seat, booster seat or seat belt for each person’s age and size.
Get resources on how to find and install the right car seat for your child such as forward-facing and rear-facing car seats, along with booster seats.
In 2013 a new car seat regulation was introduced into the EU and UK referred to as R129. It was established to make child car seats easier to fit, provide better protection from side impact collisions and keep children rear facing longer.
In the event of a front-impact collision, the use of a car seat’s top tether provides protection to a child’s neck and spine by reducing how far forward their head moves - also known as “head excursion.”
All children under age 13 should ride in a back seat. If a child must ride in the front seat, then the child with a full harness CR or properly adjusted shoulder belt, seated in the correct forward facing and upright position, should sit there. Move the vehicle seat back as far away from the airbag as possible. For older children sitting in
A 2021-22 review of the statements of key injury prevention, pediatric medicine and traffic safety organizations regarding the use of car seats, booster seats and seat belts for children found an important change in the recommendations for the use of rear-facing car seats since 2017.