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Kentucky car seat law (2026)

Children 40 inches or less must ride in a child restraint; children 7 and younger who are between 40 and 57 inches tall must be in a booster seat.

⚖️ Plain-language summary — not legal advice. These provisions are displayed from the IIHS state law table (retrieved 2026-07-16). Laws change and have exceptions — verify against the table or your state's statute before relying on them. And the law is a minimum: NHTSA's guidance is to keep a child in each stage up to the seat's own height/weight limits, which usually lasts longer than the law requires.

Source: IIHS state law table · retrieved 2026-07-16 · KY

ProvisionWhat the IIHS table lists for Kentucky
Child restraintChildren 40 inches or less must ride in a child restraint; children 7 and younger who are between 40 and 57 inches tall must be in a booster seat.
Adult seat beltChildren taller than 57 inches may use a seat belt.
Rear seatThe law states no preference for the rear seat. (NHTSA still recommends all children under 13 ride in the back.)

The law names ages — the seat's specs decide the switch

Every threshold above meets a spec question: is your child still within the seat's own height/weight limits for that mode? That's published manufacturer data, and it's what this site organizes:

FAQ

What is the car seat law in Kentucky?
Children 40 inches or less must ride in a child restraint; children 7 and younger who are between 40 and 57 inches tall must be in a booster seat. (As published in the IIHS state law table, retrieved 2026-07-16 — a summary, not legal advice.)

When can a child use just a seat belt in Kentucky?
Children taller than 57 inches may use a seat belt. Best practice is to keep using a booster until the adult belt fits properly — lap flat on the thighs, shoulder belt across the chest — regardless of the legal minimum.

Does Kentucky require children to ride in the back seat?
Kentucky law states no preference for the rear seat. That is the legal position, not the safety one: NHTSA recommends all children under 13 ride in the back seat, and a rear-facing seat must never go in front of an active passenger airbag.

Is the Kentucky law the same as best practice?
No — the law is the legal minimum. NHTSA recommends keeping children in each stage (rear-facing, forward-facing harness, booster) up to the seat's own height and weight limits, which usually lasts longer than the law requires.

Citing these specs? Go ahead — published manufacturer data, last verified 2026-06-11. Copy a ready-made reference:

All states: car seat laws by state · nearby in the list: Louisiana · Maine · Maryland · Massachusetts · Michigan