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    What the New Child Car Seat Regulations Mean for Parents

    The federal standard now includes testing for side-impact collisions. Here’s what you need to know, whether you’re buying a car seat soon or already own one.

    A caretaker tightening the straps on a toddler's car seat. Photo: Getty Images

    Car crashes continue to be a leading cause of injury for kids under age 12. In 2022, more than 100,000 children were injured in traffic collisions. This year, changes are coming to car seats to make them even more effective in side-impact collisions.

    Two-vehicle collisions account for the most deaths in crashes, especially in crashes where two vehicles collide at an angle. Compared with front-end or rear-end collisions, getting “T-boned” or experiencing a side-impact collision can be especially dangerous, according to the National Safety Council. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says: “Side impacts are especially dangerous when the impact is on the passenger compartment because, unlike a frontal or rear-end crash, there are no substantial, energy-absorbing structures between the occupant and the impacting vehicle or object. The door collapses into the passenger compartment and the occupants contact the door relatively quickly after the crash at a high relative velocity.”

    This is why safety experts and advocates at Consumer Reports have pushed for improvements to child car seats to make them more protective in side-impact collisions. “Manufacturers have been making claims about side-impact protection for many years,” says Emily A. Thomas, PhD, associate director of auto safety at CR, but up until now, “there wasn’t an industry standard.” 

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    The changes have been a long time coming. “NHTSA proposed rulemaking in 2014 to include side-impact protection for car seats in the regulatory standard,” Thomas says. “The final rule wasn’t released until June 2022. Here we are in 2025, coming up on the compliance deadline.” The required changes were set to take effect on June 30, 2025, but a proposal has been made for NHTSA to extend the compliance deadline to Dec. 5, 2026.

    Here’s what to know as manufacturers make design and manufacturing changes to child car seat to make them as safe as possible.

    What's Changing and When for Child Car Seats

    The new standard, called the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) 213a, is currently set to go into effect on June 30, 2025. After that date, all car seats sold in the U.S. that are designed for children under 40 pounds will have to meet new standards that aim to improve side-impact protection. 

    More on Car Seat Safety

    “213a is major progress for child passenger safety in the U.S.,” Thomas says, noting that similar side-impact protections already exist in European car seats because of car seat regulations in the European Union. 

    Under the new regulations, manufacturers are required to test car seats for children up to 40 pounds for side-impact protection using an updated standard. The new testing includes a simulation in which a door hit from the side “intrudes” into the car, better mimicking what happens in a real side-impact crash. The updated standard reduces the risk of a child’s head hitting a vehicle door or other structure during a crash, causing injury. It also helps limit forces to the chest. “This regulation aims to provide side impact protection for harnessed kids who won’t benefit as much from the vehicle’s side impact crash interventions, such as the side curtain airbag,” Thomas says.

    In addition, the updated testing will mean that infant seat car seat weight limits will max out at 30 pounds rather than the 35-pound weight limit currently marketed by some manufacturers. The minimum weight for forward-facing mode in harnessed car seats will also change from 22 pounds to 26.5 pounds, which will help children stay rear-facing in their car seats for longer.

    “CR has long said that you don’t need an infant seat that goes up to 35 pounds because most babies will outgrow their infant seat by height before weight,” Thomas says. “Our recommendation has been to move your child from an infant seat to a rear-facing convertible or all-in-one no later than their first birthday, which ensures better head protection in a crash. We also recommend that parents keep their child rear-facing up to the rear-facing height or weight limit, and at a minimum until the child is 2 years old. Increasing the minimum forward-facing weight requirement aligns with this advice and will help keep kids rear-facing longer, while the neck and spine get stronger.”

    What This Means if You're Already Using a Car Seat 

    You don’t have to replace your existing car seat; all car seats are already tested to a pretty tough standard. Just make sure your car seat isn’t expired or has been recalled, meets existing safety standards, and is installed correctly with your child properly harnessed.

    “The car seat you have now and the car seats that will be available in the future are all safe and will protect your child in a crash if used properly,” Thomas says. While car seat manufacturers have been testing side-impact protection for many years, the new regulations mandate a standard minimum level of side-impact protection—in other words, side-impact protection is now an official part of what manufacturers must test car seats for. “You can rest assured that your car seat has been rigorously tested to meet the minimum safety standard.”

    Here’s what to check to make sure that your current car seat is safe to continue using:
    Fit: The safest car seat is one that fits your car and your child every time, Thomas says.

    Height and weight: Check that your child is within both the height and weight limits for the orientation they’re sitting in (front-facing vs. rear-facing).

    Installation: Check your seat for common installation errors that are easy to overlook, and get professional help if you’re unsure. Thomas recommends a routine weekly check to ensure that the installation is still fully tight and secure.

    What This Means if You're Planning to Buy a Car Seat This Year

    If you are buying one now, there’s good news: Some car seat manufacturers already have models out that are compliant with the new standards. 

    That said, it won’t always be obvious which car seats meet the new standards. “Some manufacturers specify on the product page or packaging if the car seat is 213a compliant,” Thomas says, “but they are not legally required to.” 

    You can find the top car seats Consumer Reports has lab-tested for crash protection in our ratings. Sort our car seat ratings by the “crash protection” column to find the models that rank “Best.”

    What’s Next for Car Seat Safety

    As part of our nonprofit public safety mission, Consumer Reports experts often push for regulatory changes based on data we independently evaluate. CR supports these child car seat safety regulation updates and participated in rewriting and updating the standard. “CR submitted comments during the public comment period for the side-impact protection Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in April 2014. CR also conducted feasibility testing of the side-impact NPRM in March 2015 and published those findings here,” Thomas says.

    While the new regulations represent progress, Thomas says there’s more work to be done. “We would love to see NHTSA incorporate more elements of the real-world rear-seat environment into their test setup, such as a front seatback surface and a floor. This would be more representative of real back seats, evaluate the potential for head contact with the front seatback, and encourage more innovative designs that can improve crash protection, such as the load leg.” CR’s car seat crash testing program includes a simulated back seat, floor, and front seatback surface for the purposes of better simulating real-world crash conditions.

    For now, these updates are one step closer to fewer devastating injuries and deaths in side-impact collisions.


    Alexandra Frost

    Alexandra Frost

    Alexandra Frost is a journalist and content marketing writer. Her work has appeared in such publications as HuffPost, The Washington Post, Glamour, Forbes, Parents, Women's Health, Reader's Digest, Popular Science, and Today's Parent.