Buckles: Use Them for Safety, Not for Show
When someone mentions a buckle, what comes to mind? That big shiny thing on the end of your belt? The clasps that fasten your boots?
Misinformed Parents Means Unsafe Kids
- 73 percent of child restraints (buckles and car seats) aren’t used properly.
- Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among children ages four to 12.
- Half of all children newborn to seven years of age killed in car crashes are not buckled into child safety seats.
Child safety seats installed and used correctly reduce fatal injury in crashes by 71 percent for kids under one year old and 54 percent for those one to four years old. - Compared with adult seat belts, child safety seats reduce kids’ risk of death by 21 percent.
Clearing the Confusion
Though each state maintains and governs its own child safety restraint laws, we recommend this information from the NHTSA as a general guideline:
Age/Size |
Proper Positioning |
Infants to 1-year-olds weighing at least 20 pounds |
Place in rear-facing child safety seats buckled securely into the back seat |
1-year-olds weighing at least 20 pounds to 4-year-olds weighing at least 40 pounds |
Place in forward-facing child safety seats buckled securely into the back seat |
4-year-olds weighing at least 40 pounds to 8-year-olds approximately 4’9” tall and weighing over 80 pounds |
Place in booster seats buckled securely into the back seat |
|
8-year-olds approximately 4’9” tall and weighing over 80 pounds to 13-year-olds |
Tips for Safe Riding
- Choose safety seats wisely. The NHTSA compares 101 child safety and booster seats here to help you find the one that fits your needs best.
Read the instructions. Make sure you install and buckle your children’s seats properly by reading the installation instructions that come in the box. Get help. Insurers like GMAC, Allstate and Geico, along with local and state non-profit organizations, sponsor free child safety seat checks at least once a year. Ask your insurer how you can participate. Be an example. Always buckle up in front of your kids. It will make restraining them in their car or booster seats easier—and help keep everyone safe.
Protect Your Kids: Buckle them up!
When it comes to buckles, those that protect your children as they ride in the car are definitely the most important.



