When your child reaches the highest weight or height limit allowed for his forward-facing child safety seat with a harness, he should use a belt-positioning booster seat until the vehicle lap and shoulder belt (adult seat belt) fits properly, typically when he reaches 4 feet 9 inches in height and is between 8 and 12
As the driver, you're responsible for seat belt wearing and restraint use by children under 14 years. Children aged 3 or more years old, and up to 135cm (approx 4ft 5in) tall, must use an appropriate child restraint when travelling in cars or goods vehicles fitted with seat belts. A few exceptions are permitted.
at least 9 years of age. 4 feet 9 inches in height. 80 lb in weight.
While 1 year and 20 pounds used to be the standard for when to flip car seats around, most experts now recommend using rear-facing child seats until children are 2 years old and reach the top weight and height recommendations of the car seat manufacturer, which is typically around 30 pounds and 36 inches.
A child aged 3 or older can travel in a back seat without a child car seat and without a seat belt if the vehicle doesn't have one. In most cases, children under 3 must always be in a child car seat. The rules are different if: the child is in a taxi or minicab.
Ideally a 5 year old should be in a forward facing 5-point harness car seat. That can either be a convertible car seat (rear facing/forward facing), a combination car seat (forward facing/booster seat) or an all-in-one car seat (rear facing/forward facing/booster seat).
Children over 2 years of age have the same free baggage allowance as adults. Foldable strollers, car seats or baby baskets may be brought on board as additional carry-on at no charge. To increase safety, children up to 7 years old can travel in their own car seats for free.
Presently, under English law, children can travel without a car seat in a taxi or minicab (including Uber, car service, etc.) if they sit in the back seat and wear an adult seat belt when they are 3 or older, or sit without a seat belt if they are under 3 (i.e., you belt in and they sit on your lap).
A safety car seat (qualified for use in aircraft) can be taken on board for a child occupying a reserved seat. For infants younger than 2 years, you can take a car safety seat, stroller or baby carrier. A foldable baby stroller, car safety seat, or baby carrier can be taken on board the aircraft.
Although they allow for children under 2 to sit on a parents lap, the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) recommends for all young children to sit in a FAA approved car seat at all times during a flight. Most flights experience turbulence at some point.
Children under the age of two are automatically exempt from wearing face masks in the US on airplanes and in airports. All other passengers must wear a mask or apply for an exemption from the airline ahead of a flight. Airlines, however, are lenient on which masks are allowed.
THE BEST CAR SEATS FOR AIRPLANES (FAA approved) Comparison Chart
| Car Seat | Weight suitable from and to |
|---|
| Graco SnugRide 35 | 4-35 lbs |
| Peg Perego Primo Viaggio 4/35 | 4 to 35 lbs and up to 32” tall |
| Safety 1st Guide 65 | Rear-facing 5-40 pounds and Forward-facing 22-65 pounds |
| Uppa Mesa | 4–35 lbs and up to 32” in height |
When traveling with a child you are allowed to bring a stroller, a baby basket carrier or a child car seat free of charge as checked baggage. Children traveling in their own seat receive the same baggage allowance as adults. If you have a fully collapsible stroller you can take this right to the aircraft door.
Since airplane seatbelts only have a lap portion, you can not use a booster seat on an airplane. That's an example of “FAA approved booster seats†but only because it has a harness option. If your booster seat doesn't have a harness mode, it's not FAA approved. There's no such thing as an airplane booster seat.
Not all car seats are approved for use in airplanes. Make sure your CRS is government approved and has "This restraint is certified for use in motor vehicles and aircraft" printed on it. Otherwise, you may be asked to check the CRS as baggage.
There's usually no cost to check a stroller at the gate; even fee-happy airlines like Spirit allow them to be checked at the ticket counter or gate at no extra charge.
Children. TSA does not require children under 18 to provide identification when traveling within the United States. Contact the airline for questions regarding specific ID requirements for travelers under 18.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that kids use a car seat until they reach the maximum height or weight for that five-point harness. 2 This is usually not until at least age four, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
Young adults who pass the Five Step Test can ride in the vehicle seat belt in the back seat of the vehicle. Generally, kids will need a booster until they are 4'9″ tall, which tends to happen somewhere around age 11.
Age Vs Weight & Height Table
| Baby's age | Weight | Height |
|---|
| Month 12 | 9kg - 12.5kg | 70cm - 80cm |
| Year 2 | 10kg - 15kg | 80cm - 90cm |
| Year 3 | 11kg - 17kg | 86cm - 100cm |
| Year 4 | 13kg - 20kg | 92cm - 109cm |
These are designed to last a child from birth to 25kg (approximately six years old). But we believe children change too much from birth to 25kg for one seat shell to adequately provide the protection they need at each stage.
From 1 March 2017 backless booster seats can now only be used with children taller than 125cm and weighing more than 22kg. However, backless booster seats made and bought before this date are still legal and approved for use by children weighing between 15 and 36kg.
Backless booster seat requirementsHere are the general requirements for backless booster seats: Backless booster seat age requirements: From the time kids surpass the weight or height limits allowed by their car seat to about 8 to 12 years of age (depending on the child's size).
As they do, parents using an infant seat generally switch to a larger, convertible seat anywhere between 9 months and 2 years, depending on their child's size (bigger kids will likely move on faster), though they can opt to do so sooner if the seat is rated safe for their child's height and weight.
Children aged between three and 12, or up to the height of 135cm (4'4â€) in the UK and 150cm in Ireland (4'9â€), must travel in a child seat placed in either the front or back of a car. We strongly recommend that children sit in the back and remain rear-facing for as long as possible to minimise the risk of injury.
The NHTSA recommends that 6-year-old be in either a forward-facing car seat or booster seats. This all depends on how mature your little one is for their age. Most of them are ready to ride in a backless booster car seat, but if this is not the case, you should secure them in a 5 point harness seat instead.