If the straps are still snug your child can wear the jacket in the car seat.
Babies wearing coats in car seats.
Put on the jacket and strap your child in.
Parents or caregivers unsure if their child s coat is.
Put the coat on your child sit them in the child seat and fasten the harness.
Put the coat on your child sit him or her in the car seat and fasten the harness.
Plenty of car seat and child gear brands make covers for infant car seats which may seem like a perfect solution to keeping your baby warm sans puffer coat as well as snug in their car seat.
Without loosening the harness remove your child from the child seat take the coat off.
Crash test lab video aired on today last winter showed a child dummy wearing a puffy coat flying out of a car seat in a simulated 30 mph crash.
As a general rule bulky clothing including winter coats and snowsuits should not be worn underneath the harness of a car seat.
They re handmade high quality and fleece lined.
A child can then slip through the straps and be thrown from the seat.
Without loosening the straps take off the jacket and put your child back in.
If the straps are loose and dangling once you ve removed the jacket it s too big to wear under the straps.
Tighten the harness until you can no.
Bulky winter coats can pose a serious threat when worn under the straps of car seats and even booster seats by creating too much space in between your child s body and the harness itself.
Here is a simple way to check if your child s coat is too big to wear under their harness.
She points me in the direction of car seat safety guidelines set out by the manufacturers alliance for child passenger safety macps which explain that wearing bulky coats may provide enough.
Thick coats should not be warn when child strapped into car seat the coats can create too big a gap between the straps and child s body new advice states the cold winter weather is here but when in a car seat little ones should not be wearing thick coats advice states.
Tighten the harness until you can no longer pinch any of the webbing with your thumb and forefinger.