Gear

Car-Seat Airplane Tips

By Robert Herguth, Parenting
 
See Also
Age-by-age news to protect your child - Parenting.com

In a car, you buckle your child into a car seat or booster. But on a plane, guidelines are hazier, since airlines let parents keep kids under age 2 on their laps free of charge. Yet according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, a child is much safer in a car seat than on your lap. If you hit turbulence, you'll be glad he's buckled in.

On a plane, kids under 40 pounds do fine in car seats (those no wider than 16 inches fit best on airplane seats). But skip booster seats, as they don't meet safety requirements on planes. One new option on the horizon: For kids 22 to 44 pounds, the Federal Aviation Administration just certified AmSafe CAReS (Child Aviation Restraint System), a web-buckle device that takes the place of a front-facing car seat; airlines may offer it in the future. For now, ask if they provide loaners for each leg of the flight. You'll still pay for a seat (kids under 2 fly at half-price or less), but you won't have to haul a car seat onboard.


PRINT

Comments

No comments yet. Log in or register below to be the first.
Quick Poll

Who's the best-trained member of your family?

My husband
My child
Our pet


ADVERTISEMENT
Popular on Parenting.com
Popular on Parenting.com
 
Photo Galleries

9 Ways to Make Your Baby Laugh

Easy tricks to get your little cutie smiling from head to toe

promotion
 

Blog: Project Pregnancy

Taylor Newman: "By this time in two weeks, my baby and I will be two separate -- if somewhat exhausted --people." Updated daily!

Blog: The Parenting Post

Erin Zammett Ruddy: "Have you ever gotten the when-are-you-due slap in the face? What other things did people say to you after giving birth that drove you crazy?" Updated daily!
Contests

Beautiful Baby Search 2010

Our latest gallery of gorgeous contestants -- is your kiddo one of them?
Mom Congress

Win a Free Trip to Washington, D.C.

We're sending 51 amazing moms to the capital for our first annual Mom Congress -- find out how you can be one of them