Compare states
Oregon vs Washington
Which state's car seat law is stricter, side by side.
Washington is stricter.
Washington sets tighter requirements on forward-facing rules and the back-seat rule than Oregon.
Stricter overall
- Rear-facing
- Until age 2 Same
- Booster until
- Until 4'9"
- Back seat
- Required under 13
- First-offense fine
- Not specified Same
Looser of the two
- Rear-facing
- Until age 2 Same
- Booster until
- Until age 8 or 4'9"
- Back seat
- Not required
- First-offense fine
- Not specified Same
Quick answer · Oregon vs Washington
Washington has the stricter car seat law overall, with tighter rules on forward-facing rules and the back-seat rule than Oregon. Washington mandates the back seat for children under 13. Oregon meets the looser end of the range, so a child can graduate to the next stage sooner there.
Oregon and Washington both require rear-facing under 2. Washington is stricter because it keeps a forward-facing harness stage and requires children under 13 to ride in the back seat, which Oregon does not. Their booster rules differ in shape (Oregon age 8 or 4 feet 9 inches; Washington height only), so that dimension is a wash.
If you are driving between the two, the law of the state you are in applies. Following the stricter standard keeps your child legal in both.
Who is stricter on each rule
- Stricter on rear-facing required: Tie. Both require rear-facing until age 2.
- Stricter on forward-facing age: Washington. Washington sets an explicit forward-facing threshold; Oregon leaves staging to the seat manufacturer.
- Stricter on booster required until: Tie. Washington and Oregon draw the booster line differently (Washington: 4'9"; Oregon: age 8 or 4'9"), so neither is clearly stricter.
- Stricter on back seat required: Washington. Washington requires children under 13 in the back seat; Oregon has no back-seat requirement.
- Stricter on first-offense fine: Neither (statute silent). Neither state publishes a fixed first-offense fine.
- Stricter on taxi / rideshare: Tie. Both apply the same taxi and rideshare carve-outs.
On the I-5, Washington is stricter
Oregon and Washington both run the I-5 corridor between Portland and Seattle, and both require rear-facing under 2, so the youngest children are covered the same way in each. Washington is the stricter of the two overall because of two rules Oregon does not have: it keeps a forward-facing harness stage in the law and, most notably, it requires children under 13 to ride in the back seat where practical. Oregon recommends the back seat but does not require it. So a family moving up the coast picks up Washington's back-seat rule for older children.
The booster rules differ in shape, not really in strictness
The two states draw the booster line differently. Oregon releases a child at age 8 or 4 feet 9 inches, whichever comes first. Washington uses height only: a child must stay in a booster until they reach 4 feet 9 inches, with no age cap. That means a short older child can graduate at age 8 in Oregon but must keep using a booster in Washington until they actually reach 4 feet 9 inches, while a tall young child graduates by height in both. Because each rule is stricter for a different child, we treat the booster dimension as a wash and let the other rules decide. In practice, 4 feet 9 inches is the height at which a seat belt fits, so Washington's height-only rule tracks the safety standard closely.
Rear-facing and the back seat
Both states require a child under 2 to ride rear-facing, and both then require a forward-facing seat with a harness for the next stage. Where they part ways is the back seat: Washington requires children under 13 to ride in the back seat where practical, one of the strongest back-seat rules in the country, while Oregon has no back-seat requirement. A parent who seats a 9 year old up front is fine in Oregon but outside Washington's rule.
The drive between them
Neither state sets a single fixed dollar fine in the restraint statute; both enforce the rule as a violation. The law that applies is the law of the state you are driving in. On an I-5 trip, follow Washington's stricter standard: rear-facing under 2, a booster until the child reaches 4 feet 9 inches, and any child under 13 in the back seat. That keeps you compliant in both states.
Washington vs Oregon, dimension by dimension
"Stricter" means the state keeps a child in a more protective restraint longer, or sets a tougher penalty. Where the statute is silent, that is noted, not scored as leniency. Best-practice guidance is separate from the legal minimum.
| Dimension | Washington | Oregon | Stricter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rear-facing required Both require rear-facing until age 2. | Until age 2 | Until age 2 | Tie |
| Forward-facing age Washington sets an explicit forward-facing threshold; Oregon leaves staging to the seat manufacturer. | From age 2 | Not set by statute | Washington |
| Booster required until Washington and Oregon draw the booster line differently (Washington: 4'9"; Oregon: age 8 or 4'9"), so neither is clearly stricter. | Until 4'9" | Until age 8 or 4'9" | Tie |
| Seat belt allowed Oregon makes children wait longer before a seat belt alone is legal. | From 4'9" tall | From age 8 or 4'9" tall | Oregon |
| Back seat required Washington requires children under 13 in the back seat; Oregon has no back-seat requirement. | Required under 13 | Not required | Washington |
| First-offense fine Neither state publishes a fixed first-offense fine. | Not specified | Not specified | Neither (statute silent) |
| Taxi / rideshare Both apply the same taxi and rideshare carve-outs. | Exempts transit | Exempts transit | Tie |
- Washington
- Until age 2
- Oregon
- Until age 2
Both require rear-facing until age 2.
- Washington
- From age 2
- Oregon
- Not set by statute
Washington sets an explicit forward-facing threshold; Oregon leaves staging to the seat manufacturer.
- Washington
- Until 4'9"
- Oregon
- Until age 8 or 4'9"
Washington and Oregon draw the booster line differently (Washington: 4'9"; Oregon: age 8 or 4'9"), so neither is clearly stricter.
- Washington
- From 4'9" tall
- Oregon
- From age 8 or 4'9" tall
Oregon makes children wait longer before a seat belt alone is legal.
- Washington
- Required under 13
- Oregon
- Not required
Washington requires children under 13 in the back seat; Oregon has no back-seat requirement.
- Washington
- Not specified
- Oregon
- Not specified
Neither state publishes a fixed first-offense fine.
- Washington
- Exempts transit
- Oregon
- Exempts transit
Both apply the same taxi and rideshare carve-outs.