Baby Gear
Car Seat Laws Explained: FMVSS 213, Rear-Facing and the Side-Impact Rule
A certified child passenger safety technician walks through the federal standards, state rear-facing laws, expiration windows, and the delayed FMVSS 213a side-impact rule — so you can shop and install with confidence.
Clinically reviewed · June 2026
Every car seat sold in the U.S. meets FMVSS 213. A major update — FMVSS 213a — is adding mandatory side-impact sled testing for seats used by children under 40 lbs, with full compliance expected by December 5, 2026. State rear-facing laws vary; most now require rear-facing to at least age 2. Expiration dates run from manufacture and are typically 6–10 years.
Car seat rules arrive from two directions at once: federal manufacturing standards that determine what gets to be sold in the first place, and state laws that specify how children must be restrained once they are in the car. As a certified child passenger safety technician, I spend a lot of time helping families sort out the difference — and understanding both layers helps you make a more confident buying decision and installation choice. This guide walks through the federal standards, the state rear-facing picture, expiration, and the most significant regulatory change in a generation: the new FMVSS 213a side-impact rule.
This article is general safety information, not legal or medical advice. Laws change; always verify your state's current requirements directly. A CPST can help with seat selection and installation questions specific to your vehicle and child.
What Is FMVSS 213, and What Does It Actually Require?
FMVSS 213 — Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 213 — is the foundational federal regulation that every child restraint system sold in the United States must certify to before reaching a store shelf. It has been in place since 1971 and has been updated repeatedly as research on crash dynamics and child physiology has advanced. Seeing a car seat at a major retailer guarantees it has cleared this federal floor — but clearing the minimum is not the same as leading in independent crash testing, which is why organizations like BabyGearLab commission their own sled tests against more demanding protocols.
The standard covers crash-performance requirements (based on frontal sled tests simulating a collision), harness strength and geometry, flammability resistance of materials, structural integrity, and labeling. A seat that fails any element of FMVSS 213 cannot legally be sold in the U.S., and NHTSA issues recalls when manufacturing defects or labeling errors bring a seat out of compliance — at no cost to registered owners.
One nuance parents should understand: FMVSS 213 sets the floor, not the ceiling. Federal testing uses standardized crash dummies on frontal sled tests, and many third-party evaluators use more aggressive methodologies. Two seats that both pass FMVSS 213 can still differ meaningfully in real-world protection — which is why crash-test scores from independent labs matter alongside regulatory compliance.
What Is FMVSS 213a, and Why Is the Side-Impact Rule Such a Big Deal?
FMVSS 213a is the most significant regulatory update to car seat standards in decades. NHTSA finalized the rule in 2023 after research demonstrated that side-impact crashes cause nearly as many child fatalities as frontal crashes — despite prior standards requiring only frontal sled tests. The data reflected a real gap: a car seat that passed every required test could still perform poorly in the T-bone and near-side crashes that account for a substantial share of serious child injuries.
The new standard requires a 30 mph side-impact sled test for all seats designed for children under 40 lbs. That scope covers infant carriers, rear-facing convertibles, forward-facing harness seats, and combination seats. Booster seats are not currently subject to the new side-impact requirement. Many manufacturers had voluntarily conducted side-impact testing for years under their own protocols; FMVSS 213a standardizes the methodology and makes it mandatory across the industry, creating an apples-to-apples comparison for the first time.
The original compliance deadline was June 30, 2025. A coalition of child restraint manufacturers petitioned NHTSA for more time, arguing that limited certified sled-test lab capacity would cause significant market disruption and reduce seat availability during the transition. NHTSA proposed extending the full compliance deadline to December 5, 2026, and stated it would not take enforcement action against manufacturers for non-compliance until the final rule is published. A subsequent FMVSS 213b is also under development, with proposed mandatory applicability beginning December 5, 2026. When shopping now, look for FMVSS 213a compliance language on packaging — several manufacturers have already certified products under the new standard ahead of the final deadline.
Some seats on store shelves today already carry FMVSS 213a certification; others do not yet. Manufacturers that voluntarily conducted side-impact testing before the rule — including Chicco, Nuna, and Britax — are generally well-positioned. If side-impact performance matters to you (it should), look for explicit 213a labeling or ask the retailer directly. By late 2026, the entire market will be required to comply.
What Does My State's Rear-Facing Law Actually Require?
State rear-facing laws vary more than most parents realize — and many older laws have not kept pace with current safety evidence. The good news: most states have updated their requirements in the past several years. The challenging part is that specific age, weight, and height thresholds differ enough that a brief summary cannot substitute for checking your state directly.
SafeRide4Kids maintains a continuously updated state-by-state law chart that is the most reliable quick-reference tool. A few illustrative examples as of 2026:
- California: Rear-facing required until age 2, unless the child exceeds 40 lbs or 40 inches.
- Colorado: A 2025 law requires rear-facing for children under 2 years and under 40 lbs with a 5-point harness.
- Minnesota: All children under 2 must be in a rear-facing seat with an internal harness.
- New Hampshire: Rear-facing required for children under 2 who weigh less than 30 lbs; a broader standard applies for children under 4 weighing less than 40 lbs.
- Massachusetts: Rear-facing through age 2; rear-seat placement mandated for children under 4.
Some states still carry older laws using only a "1 year and 20 lbs" minimum — a threshold that falls far below current safety guidance. Crucially, state law is the legal floor, not the safety recommendation. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises keeping children rear-facing until they reach the seat's maximum weight or height limit, regardless of the state minimum. The physics are straightforward: in a frontal crash, a rear-facing seat spreads impact forces across the back, head, and neck as a unit rather than concentrating them on the harness attachment points.
| State | Rear-facing requirement | Key threshold |
|---|---|---|
| California | Until age 2 | Unless >40 lbs or >40 in |
| Colorado | Under 2 years AND under 40 lbs | 5-point harness required (2025 law) |
| Minnesota | Under 2 years | Internal harness required |
| Massachusetts | Through age 2; rear seat for under 4 | Rear seat placement explicit |
| New Hampshire | Under 2 and under 30 lbs (RF); under 4 and under 40 lbs (broad) | Dual age+weight threshold |
| AAP guidance (all states) | Rear-face to seat's maximum limit | Regardless of state minimum |
Why Do Car Seats Expire, and How Do I Find the Date?
Expiration dates on car seats exist for a straightforward materials science reason: the petroleum-based plastics used in seat shells, harness components, and load-bearing hardware degrade over time under heat cycling, UV exposure, and repeated physical stress. A seat that passes FMVSS 213 crash tests when new may not maintain the same structural integrity after years of summers in a hot car.
NHTSA does not mandate a specific expiration window but recommends following each manufacturer's guidance. General industry practice runs as follows:
- Infant carriers: typically 6 years from manufacture
- Convertible seats: typically 8 years from manufacture
- All-in-one and booster seats: often up to 10 years from manufacture
For example, the Chicco KeyFit 35 carries a 6-year expiration from the manufacture date. The expiration date appears on a sticker affixed to the seat's underside or is embossed directly into the plastic shell. The critical nuance: expiration runs from the manufacture date, not the purchase date. A seat that sat on a store shelf for 14 months is already 14 months closer to expiration before you install it. Always check the sticker at purchase, not just the box date.
No federal law prohibits using an expired seat, but doing so is against every manufacturer's guidance, invalidates any crash-test certification claims, and is not recommended under any circumstances. An expired seat should be destroyed in a way that renders it unusable — cut the harness straps and write "EXPIRED — DO NOT USE" across the shell in permanent marker before placing it in a trash bag — so that it cannot be picked up and reused by another family.
How to Check for Recalls and Register Your Seat
Car seat recalls are more common than many parents realize. In recent years alone, Graco, Britax, Chicco, Evenflo, and Safety 1st have all issued significant recalls covering hundreds of thousands of units — for issues ranging from structural failures and choking hazards to incorrect labeling and crash performance shortfalls. All recall remedies (parts, replacement seats, or full refunds) are provided at no cost to the owner, with no expiration on the recall itself.
The primary check resource is NHTSA's recall database at nhtsa.gov/recalls. Select "Car Seats" under product type and filter by manufacturer and date range. The NHTSA SaferCar app (iOS and Android) delivers push notifications when a seat you have registered is recalled. Third-party databases at carseat.org (SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A.) and saferidenews.com maintain continuously updated recall lists sorted alphabetically by manufacturer.
Registration is the step that actually connects your specific seat to any future recall notice. Register online at the manufacturer's website using the model number and manufacture date on the seat's label sticker — or mail the registration card included in the box. You will need the manufacturer name, model number, and manufacture date, all of which appear on the sticker. Even registered owners should check the NHTSA database periodically, particularly before passing a seat to another family.
To find free seat inspections by a Certified Child Passenger Safety Technician — the only qualified person to assess proper installation — use the NHTSA inspection station locator, call the NHTSA helpline at 1-888-327-4236, or check AAA's car seat inspection program at more than 90 locations nationwide. Bring both the car seat manual and your vehicle owner's manual to any inspection appointment.
Frequently asked
What is FMVSS 213 and why does it matter when buying a car seat?
FMVSS 213 — Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 213 — is the federal law that every child restraint system sold in the United States must meet before it can be legally offered for sale. First published in 1971 and updated many times since, it specifies crash-performance requirements, harness strength, flammability resistance, and labeling rules. NHTSA's Federal Register notice on the 2025 FMVSS 213a update summarizes the full regulatory history. In practical terms, seeing a seat on a U.S. store shelf means it has already cleared the federal floor — but meeting the minimum is not the same as leading in independent crash-test scores, which is why organizations like BabyGearLab commission their own sled tests using more demanding protocols.
What does FMVSS 213a add, and when does it take effect?
FMVSS 213a is the most significant regulatory update in decades. NHTSA finalized the rule in 2023 after research showed that side-impact crashes cause nearly as many child fatalities as frontal crashes — yet prior standards required only frontal sled tests. The new standard requires a 30 mph side-impact sled test for all seats designed for children under 40 lbs: infant carriers, rear-facing convertibles, forward-facing harness seats, and combination seats. Booster seats are not yet covered. The original compliance date was June 30, 2025, but manufacturer petitions citing limited certified lab capacity led NHTSA to propose extending the full deadline to December 5, 2026. Some manufacturers have already certified products voluntarily. Look for FMVSS 213a language on packaging when shopping now.
What is the rear-facing car seat law in my state?
State rear-facing laws vary considerably, and many older laws have not kept pace with current safety guidance. SafeRide4Kids maintains a continuously updated state-by-state law chart that is the most reliable quick reference. Key examples as of 2026: California requires rear-facing until age 2 unless the child exceeds 40 lbs or 40 inches. Colorado enacted a 2025 law requiring rear-facing for children under 2 and under 40 lbs with a 5-point harness. Minnesota requires all children under 2 in a rear-facing seat with an internal harness. Massachusetts mandates rear-facing through age 2 and rear-seat placement for children under 4. Some states still carry older laws using only a “1 year and 20 lbs” minimum — far below current safety evidence. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises keeping children rear-facing until they reach the seat's maximum weight or height limit, regardless of the state minimum.
When does a car seat expire, and how do I find the date?
Car seat expiration dates exist because petroleum-based plastics degrade under repeated heat cycling, UV exposure, and physical stress over years of use. SafeRide4Kids explains the degradation science in detail. NHTSA does not mandate a specific expiration window but recommends following each manufacturer's label. General industry norms are 6 years for infant carriers, 8 years for convertible seats, and up to 10 years for all-in-ones and booster seats. The expiration date is printed on a sticker on the seat's underside or embossed into the shell — and critically, it runs from the manufacture date, not the purchase date. A seat that sat on a retailer's shelf for a year is already a year closer to expiration. No federal law prohibits using an expired seat, but doing so is against manufacturer guidance and is strongly inadvisable.
Is a used or secondhand car seat safe to use?
Child passenger safety professionals strongly advise against using secondhand seats unless you can verify the complete history of the specific seat. Three compounding risks apply: the seat may already be under a recall that was never remedied; its crash history is unknown (a seat involved in a moderate or severe crash may have invisible structural damage and should be retired); and it may already be past its expiration date. If you do use a secondhand seat from a trusted source — a close family member whose history you know — check the seat's model and manufacture date against NHTSA's recall database before installation. Never use a seat purchased from an online resale marketplace, a thrift store, or a garage sale where the full history cannot be confirmed. This is general safety information; a Certified Child Passenger Safety Technician can help you evaluate any specific seat.
How do I register a car seat to receive recall notices?
Registration is the single most actionable step you can take after buying a car seat — it is the mechanism that ensures the manufacturer can notify you by first-class mail if a safety recall affects your specific seat. Registration can be completed online at the manufacturer's website using the model number and manufacture date printed on the seat's label sticker, or by mailing the registration card included in the box (no postage required). The NHTSA SaferCar app (iOS and Android) also delivers push notifications when a registered seat is recalled. Recalls must be remedied at no charge, with no expiration date on the recall itself. Even with registration, periodically check nhtsa.gov/recalls independently — particularly before passing a seat to another family or purchasing a secondhand one.