How car-seat fit actually works
Three things decide whether a car seat is right: the stage your child is in, whether the seat fits your child within that stage, and whether it physically fits your car. Here's each in plain English — and how we compute it.
1. The stages, per NHTSA
NHTSA recommends keeping a child in each stage as long as they fit it — the next stage is a step down in protection, not an upgrade. These are the published guidelines (state laws vary and are usually less strict):
Rear-facing0–36 months
Birth until at least age 2, and ideally until the child reaches the top height or weight allowed by the rear-facing limits of their convertible seat. Rear-facing is the safest position for the head, neck, and spine in a crash.
Forward-facing harness24–84 months
After outgrowing rear-facing, in a forward-facing seat with a 5-point harness and top tether, until reaching the top height or weight the harness allows — typically around age 5, but keep using the harness as long as the child fits.
Belt-positioning booster60–144 months
After outgrowing the forward-facing harness, in a belt-positioning booster so the adult lap-and-shoulder belt fits correctly, until the seat belt fits without a booster — usually when the child is about 4 feet 9 inches tall, between ages 8 and 12.
Adult seat belt96+ months
Ready for the adult seat belt alone when the lap belt sits low across the upper thighs (not the stomach) and the shoulder belt crosses the middle of the shoulder and chest — and the child can sit all the way back with knees bent at the seat edge. All children under 13 ride in the back seat.
2. Does the seat fit your child?
Every seat has a labeled weight and height range for each mode. A seat is only a candidate if your child is within that range right now — not too small for the rear-facing minimum, not over the harness weight limit. We use each seat's NHTSA-published limits, and we show how much room your child has left to grow into it.
3. Does the seat fit your car?
- Single position. Virtually every passenger vehicle accepts one convertible seat in an outboard rear position. The real catch is rear-facing legroom in short cars — a deep rear-facing seat can crowd the front passenger. We flag the cars where that's likely.
- Three across. This is pure geometry: three seat-widths against your car's usable rear-bench width. Most benches are 47–52"; three narrow (~17") seats need about 51". We compute it per seat, per car — but it's decided by half-inches, so always test-fit.
- LATCH. Lower anchors make install easier, but they have a weight limit (often ~65 lb combined child + seat); above it you switch to the vehicle seat belt. We show each seat's LATCH limit and each car's number of anchor positions.
4. Why we rank by Ease-of-Use
Among the seats that fit, we lead with the ones NHTSA rated easiest to install and use correctly. That's deliberate: surveys consistently find that a large share of car seats are installed or used incorrectly, and the safest seat is the one that's used right every trip. NHTSA's Ease-of-Use rating is the best neutral, cross-brand signal for that — and unlike crash tests, NHTSA actually publishes it per seat.
Stage guidance reproduced from NHTSA (data pulled 2026-06-17). See methodology & sources. Informational only — built from NHTSA public car-seat ratings and published seat/vehicle dimensions. This is not a safety certification and not a substitute for the seat and vehicle manuals. Always confirm the fit and install yourself before every trip.