When can my child be in a regular seatbelt without a booster?
Children are not ready to be in a regular lap/shoulder seatbelt until:
* They are tall enough so that their legs bend at the knees at the edge of the seat; and
* They are mature enough to remain seated with their backs flat against the back of the seat and not slouch; and
* The lap belt sits high on the thighs or low on the hips (NOT on their tummy!); and
* The shoulder belt crosses the shoulder and chest (NOT on their arms or neck!); and
Each passenger must have their own lap and shoulder belt! Never allow children to share a seatbelt.
Some organizations will also give limits like 80 or 100 pounds, 4'9" in height or 8 years old. These are rough guidelines, not absolute limits. The criteria above are most important.
all4fun said:I agree, very lax, IMO. Our state requires a booster until age 8 or 4'9".
If you don't want to bring a car seat or high back booster for your 4yr old then I recommend at least getting an inexpensive backless booster which will protect her from "seatbelt syndrome" in a car accident. I have seen them on sale recently at Target, Kmart, and Walmart for less than $15.
This is from Car-safety.org
The AAP car seat guide says essentially the same thing.
If she's under 40lbs though ideally, she should still be in a harnessed seat.
No Flames please. Just trying to inform.
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PenguinWaiters said:Will my 2.5 year old need a car seat or booster if we are NOT renting a car? I am assuming that she doesn't need one to ride ME or the Disney buses.
That always seemed strange to me though - to have good strict rules about car seats in cars and then to not even have seatbelts on buses. Does anyone else find that strange? To be honest, I have not taken her on any buses yet because I feel odd not strapping her in!![]()
Terri
Stephres said:If you are renting a van, some come with seats that fold down into boosters with a harness.
I live here in Florida and the law (or lack thereof) is frustrating. My six year old has been called a baby by one of his friends for still riding in a booster. None of his friends still ride in them. Sorry to get off topic.
FigmentsBiggestFan said:Yes, the law is pretty pathetic. I always thought they had to be something like 80 lbs. before they could get out of the booster seat, so my DS (5-1/2) has never really had a choice. We are lucky in that all his friends still use them. When they are riding together, they actually fight to see who gets to sit in the "cool" one. (Hmmm, they are all exactly the same!!)
Tell your son that his friends are just jealous because he gets to ride comfortably in the cool seat!
jodifla said:Actually, I think the law is just right. THere's nothint preventing parents from using boosters until kids are 8, or beyond. BUt parents aren't turned unnecessarily into lawbreakers if they choose not to use them.
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The law is the same way in Michigan, and many other states.
Over the past two years, Mineta said less than 20 percent of kids who should be in booster seats are actually in them when they are riding in cars.
all4fun said:Yes, but laws everywhere are being beefed up because booster seats do save lives. They were just bumped up from 6 & 60lb to 8 or 4'9" where I live.
There's also a big push from the NHTSA for states to beef up their car seat laws:
http://www.dot.gov/affairs/dot2406.htm
Maybe if everyone would just do what is right we wouldn't have to have laws. But that isn't realistic, unfortunately.
jodifla said:I get sick of the government .... or other do - gooders -- telling me how to raise my kid.
as I am a bus driver ( Have read hundreds of arguements about seatbelts on bussesIf you are using public transportation, then you won't need a booster seat