Safe use of a child's car seat is very important in keeping kids safe anytime you are travelling in a vehicle. This includes proper installation as well as knowing the product you are using. Check out some articles we have posted in the past:
Interview to Go with Ryan Hawker, Product Developer - Car Seat Safety
5 Tips for Car Seat Safety
Here is information posted on the Transport Canada Website about expiry dates. Did you know your car seat expires?
All children’s car seats and booster seats sold in Canada have an expiry or useful life date on them, even though this is not required by regulation. Manufacturers do this to inform current owners and prospective buyers of the potential risks of using car seats and booster seats that may be missing important parts, labels or instructions and/or may have an unknown history, which could lead to less than optimal safe performance when needed. People should not use children’s car seats and booster seats past their expiry or useful life date. Beyond this date it is preferable that the car seat be permanently discarded rather than donated to a charitable organization, second hand store, or given to friends or relatives.
Manufacturers give an expiry or useful life date because over time:
- frequent use and exposure to sunlight can damage and weaken plastic;
- safe-use labels on the products fade or become hard to read;
- instruction manuals have likely been lost;
- food, cleaners, drinks and other materials that have been spilled or used on webbing, buckles, adjusters and other parts may prevent them from working safely;
- the history or condition of the car seat or booster seat becomes hard to check (was it in a crash, was it stored in a place or in a way that caused damage to parts, etc.?);
- safety regulations and standards may have changed, so safer products may now be on the market; and second or subsequent owners may not get product safety recall notices if problems arise.
In Canada, all provinces and territories require infants and toddlers to be buckled up in the appropriate car seat. Several provinces also require booster seats for children who have outgrown a child car seat but are too small for a regular seat belt. The provincial and territorial laws also say that the children's car seats and booster seats must be certified to Canada Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and must be used according to the manufacturer's instructions. If you don't follow the instructions or if you use them past their expiry or useful life dates - you may be putting your child’s safety at risk and you may be found guilty of breaking the law.
For more information, including a list of car seats and their life span, please visit Transport Canada.