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Car seat & booster law

Louisiana

Verified · JUN 2026

Quick answer · Louisiana

A car seat or booster is required until your child is 9 years old.

Children under 2 ride rear-facing; then in a forward-facing harness; then in a belt-positioning booster from age 4; then a seat belt from age 9. Children under 13 must ride in the rear seat when available.

Rear-facing < 2 yr Forward 2+ yr Booster < 9 yr Belt 9+ yr
La. Rev. Stat. § 32:295 Read the statute

Car seat law checker

The legally required restraint, by state.

3 yrs

General information, not legal advice.

SeatChecker

Required vs recommended

What the law enforces, and what pediatricians advise. They are not the same.

The law requires

Minimum, or it's enforceable

Rear-facing until
Age 2
Booster until
Age 9
Back seat
Required under 13

Pediatricians recommend

AAP — safer, not the law

Rear-facing until
To seat limit (often age 2+)
Booster until
4'9" — typically age 8–12
Back seat
Until age 13

AAP guidance is a safety best practice and is separate from Louisiana's legal minimum. Louisiana's staged law, including booster use through age 8 and rear seat use through age 12, tracks the recommendations closely.

Every stage, by the law

Dual units shown throughout (in + cm, lb + kg). Rows marked Guidance are best practice, not a statutory requirement in Louisiana.

Age
Birth – 2 yr
Age
2 yr – 9 yr
Age
until 9 yr
Age
9 yr +
Age
under 13 yr

Frequently asked questions

What is the car seat law in Louisiana in 2026?
Children under 2 ride rear-facing; then in a forward-facing harness; then in a belt-positioning booster from age 4; then a seat belt from age 9. Children under 13 must ride in the rear seat when available.
When can my child stop using a booster in Louisiana?
At age 9, or once the child outgrows the booster's height or weight limits. Pediatricians recommend keeping a child in a booster until the seat belt actually fits.
How long does my child have to ride rear-facing in Louisiana?
A child younger than 2 must ride in a rear-facing child restraint in Louisiana. The child should stay rear-facing until reaching the seat's manufacturer weight or height limit, which is often past the child's second birthday.
Are Uber, Lyft, and taxis exempt from Louisiana's car seat law?
No. Louisiana's child restraint law has no general exemption for taxis or rideshare. The statute includes only a few limited exceptions in its subsections, so plan to bring an appropriate car seat or booster when your child rides in an Uber, Lyft, or taxi.

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