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Car Seat on Allegiant Air: The Complete 2026 Guide

Allegiant publishes the most detailed car-seat policy of any US ultra-low-cost carrier — citing 14 CFR 21.305(d) verbatim, specifying a 17.88" aircraft-seat-width limit, and banning boosters by FAA reference.

Conditional
Verified May 1, 2026

Yes — per Allegiant's published policy, a FAA-approved car seat flies free as gate or counter check; cabin use requires a purchased adult ticket plus window-seat installation. Booster seats and non-CARES harness devices are explicitly banned by FAA reference.

Source: 14 CFR 121.311 (Approved child restraint systems) + 14 CFR 21.305(d) (CARES harness approval)

Gate check: $0
Width limit: 17.88"
Window seat required
Boosters: banned onboard
Verified live
Gate Check Fee
$0 — one car seat per fare-paying passenger
Aircraft-Seat-Width Limit
17.88" — wider unlikely to fit
Required Seat Position
Window only — never aisle or exit row
Labeling Required
FMVSS.213 + 'certified for aircraft use'
CARES Harness Range
22–44 lbs (FAA 14 CFR 21.305(d))
Boosters Onboard
Banned by FAA reference (per Allegiant)
Verified Quote

The Exact Allegiant Policy

Word-for-word from the official source — no paraphrasing.

Children seated in car seats must be placed in a window seat and may not be placed in an aisle seat, between a passenger and the aisle, or in the exit row or rows directly in front of or behind an exit row. ... The only harness-type device approved by the FAA is the AmSafe Aviation CARES. It is designed for children weighing between 22 and 44 pounds and must include a label that says 'FAA Approved in Accordance with 14CFR 21.305(d), Approved for Aircraft Use Only.' ... Backless booster seats, safety belt extensions ... and vest or harness devices ... are banned for use on aircraft by the FAA.
Retrieved May 1, 2026
Read on allegiantair.com
The Process

How It Works on Allegiant

Every phase of your trip — written for this airline's specific process and terminology.

Before You Leave

Measure + verify — day before

1

Measure your car seat base width

Day before

Per Allegiant's published wording, car seats wider than 17.88 inches are unlikely to fit on A319/A320 aircraft seats. Measure your seat's base + side wings before booking — many Britax Marathon and Diono Radian models exceed this.

2

Confirm the FAA-approved label is present

Day before

Per Allegiant: must include 'FMVSS.213 insignia or certification language.' Look for the red-letter sticker: 'This restraint is certified for use in motor vehicles and aircraft' (for seats manufactured after Feb 26, 1985).

3

Bring a padded gate-check bag

When packing

Per RL12, Allegiant's contract of carriage defaults — no baby-gear-specific damage disclaimer is published, but liability cap is the standard $4,700 domestic (14 CFR 254.4).

At Security

TSA checkpoint

4

Remove child from car seat before X-ray

At the belt

Per TSA: 'Remove infants and children from strollers and car seats and carry them in arms through the walk-through metal detector.' The seat goes on the X-ray belt.

5

Carry the seat through, not roll it

At screening

Allegiant terminals have standard TSA equipment; oversized seats get visual inspection. A FAA-Approved label speeds inspection.

6

Pre-check the CARES harness in carry-on if using

Before security

Per Allegiant's verbatim policy, CARES must show the AmSafe label citing 14 CFR 21.305(d). Have the label visible in case asked.

At Allegiant Gate

Gate check or cabin install

7

Tag at the gate for free gate-check OR install in-cabin

At boarding

Per Allegiant: one car seat per fare-paying passenger free at counter or gate check. In-cabin use requires a purchased adult ticket for the child.

8

Confirm window-seat assignment (in-cabin use only)

Before boarding

Per Allegiant verbatim: window seat required; never aisle, between passengers, or in exit row / rows directly fore/aft of exit row. If you're not in a window, ask the gate agent to reassign.

I have a car seat for my child — I need a confirmed window seat that's not adjacent to the exit row.

9

Pre-board with the under-2 announcement

Before boarding

Per RL12, Allegiant has no published family pre-boarding zone but practice is reliable — listen for disability/additional-time call.

Onboard

Installation + safety

10

Install forward-facing with seat-belt path threaded correctly

Before pushback

Per FAA 14 CFR 121.311(b)(2)(ii): CRS must be forward-facing on the aircraft seat with the lap belt threaded through the seat's vehicle-belt path. Crew may not assist with installation — review your seat's manual.

11

If using CARES — verify label visible during installation

Before pushback

Per Allegiant, the CARES label must say verbatim 'FAA Approved in Accordance with 14CFR 21.305(d), Approved for Aircraft Use Only.' Lost or unreadable label = denial onboard.

12

Never use boosters or vest harnesses for taxi/takeoff/landing

Throughout flight

Per Allegiant + FAA 14 CFR 121.311(c)(1): 'Backless booster seats, safety belt extensions ... and vest or harness devices ... are banned for use on aircraft by the FAA.' This is a full onboard prohibition.

At Destination

Inspect + report

13

Inspect at jet bridge before leaving the gate

On arrival

Per RL12, Allegiant common rejection reasons for damage claims: 'pre-existing damage; improper packing.' Photograph any damage BEFORE leaving the aircraft area.

14

File damaged-baggage report within 24 hours

Within 24 hours

Per RL14 + RL10, Allegiant Baggage Service Office is 866-719-3910. Domestic liability cap $4,700 (14 CFR 254.4) — but Allegiant's Contract of Carriage may invoke fragile-item exclusions.

15

Document the PGD/IND family-removal precedent if denied accommodation

If rebooked overnight

Per RL11, Allegiant Flight 608 removal (4.1M-view TikTok) ended with the family receiving an ill-fitting loaner car seat with no padding. Cite the precedent if Allegiant rebooks you without comparable gear.

Trip Planner

Pick Your Trip Type

Cabin install vs. gate-check strategy changes significantly by flight length and car-seat width.

Under 2 hours
LAS → BUR (1h 15m)

Gate-check car seat free; use lap-infant or purchased seat with CARES if child >22 lb

  • Per Allegiant: one car seat per fare-paying passenger free gate or counter check.
  • For lap infants (under 24 months), check the seat; install only if you bought a separate seat.
  • Allegiant's narrow A319/A320 17–18" cabin seats mean wider car seats (>17.88") may not fit — confirm seat width before booking.
5+ hours
EUG → SFB (5h via PIE self-connect)

In-cabin install in a window seat (purchased ticket required) OR gate-check both segments

  • Per Allegiant + FAA, in-cabin use requires a paid seat for the child.
  • Allegiant operates point-to-point — multi-leg itineraries require re-clearing security AND re-tagging gear.
  • Per RL11, the PGD/IND family removal precedent is a real risk on Allegiant — keep gear with you in cabin if possible.
Allegiant does not fly international scheduled routes

Use a oneworld or SkyTeam carrier for international travel with a child

  • Allegiant operates domestic + limited Mexico leisure routes only.
  • For international long-haul with a car seat, see car-seat × delta or car-seat × american briefs.
  • Montreal Convention liability cap (1,519 SDR / ~$2,000) applies on international Allegiant flights if any.
What's Different

Federal Rules vs Allegiant's Rules

Where the airline aligns with TSA/FAA — and where it goes further.

FAA-approved labeling required
FAA 14 CFR 121.311(b)(2)(ii): red-letter label 'certified for use in motor vehicles and aircraft' (post-Feb 1985 manufacture)
Allegiant: requires 'FMVSS.213 insignia or certification language' verbatim
Match
Window seat requirement
FAA: forward-facing seat, generally window, not blocking egress
Allegiant: 'Children seated in car seats must be placed in a window seat ... not ... aisle ... not in the exit row'
Match
Aircraft-seat-width constraint
FAA recommends ≤16" CRS width; not mandatory
Allegiant: 'max width unlikely to fit if >17.88"' (A319/A320 cabin seat width)
Lenient
CARES harness
FAA 14 CFR 21.305(d): AmSafe Aviation CARES approved for 22–44 lb / ≤40" tall
Allegiant: cites 14 CFR 21.305(d) verbatim — most specific of any US carrier
Match
Booster seats onboard
FAA 14 CFR 121.311(c)(1): not approved during taxi/takeoff/landing
Allegiant: 'Backless booster seats ... banned for use on aircraft by the FAA' — interprets as full onboard ban
Stricter
Insider Tips

What Allegiant Won't Put in Writing

Measure to 17.88 inches before you book

Per Allegiant's published policy, car seats wider than 17.88 inches are unlikely to fit in A319/A320 cabin seats. Many popular Britax Marathon ClickTight (18.5"), Diono Radian RXT (17" base + 19" wings), and Graco 4Ever DLX (19" wings) models exceed this. Measure your seat's widest point including side wings — if over 17.88", plan to gate-check rather than install in cabin.

Allegiant's CFR-citation paragraph is your strongest checkpoint defense

Per RL2, Allegiant is the only US carrier whose public policy cites 14 CFR 21.305(d) verbatim plus the full AmSafe CARES label text. Screenshot allegiantair.com/customer-service/traveling-with-children and show it to any gate agent unfamiliar with CARES — Allegiant's own page is the most precise US-airline citation in the industry.

Beware the PGD precedent on family removal

Per RL11, Allegiant Flight 608 PGD → IND (March 2026) removed a family of three after a flight attendant claimed the infant looked feverish — without taking her temperature. The family was deplaned without their checked car seat, given an ill-fitting loaner the next day. If you're rebooked overnight, demand a comparable padded gate-check option in writing before accepting the substitution.

Photograph the car seat at every handoff

Per RL10, every major US carrier disclaims stroller/car-seat damage in their Contract of Carriage; Allegiant's standard liability defaults to $4,700 domestic cap. Photograph the seat at counter check, gate check, and jet-bridge return. Per RL12, Allegiant common rejection reasons cite 'pre-existing damage' — your photos are the rebuttal.

Real Stories

What Parents Experienced on Allegiant

Recent, route-specific, verified.

PGD

Sydney Tash, her husband and newborn were removed from Allegiant Flight 608 (PGD → IND) in March 2026 after a flight attendant claimed the crying baby looked feverish and MedLink advised against travel. No temperature was taken. The family was deplaned without their checked bags, stroller, or car seat, given an ill-fitting unclaimed loaner car seat, and rebooked roughly 12 hours later. Allegiant said crew followed safety protocol. The TikTok hit 4.1 million views. Source: Simple Flying.

If You're Refused

What To Do at the Gate If They Say No

Allegiant denials are rare on the car-seat itself — the airline publishes a clear policy — but the underlying friction is at boarding when a gate agent flags a non-compliant label, a non-window-seat assignment, or a flight-attendant safety call like the PGD precedent.

Denial Protocol
3-Step Escalation
  1. 1

    Cite Allegiant's own policy + federal CFR

    Per Allegiant's published policy at allegiantair.com/customer-service/traveling-with-children, my car seat meets FMVSS.213 certification and 14 CFR 121.311 requirements. The CARES harness label cites 14 CFR 21.305(d) verbatim.

    Per Allegiant's published policy, my car seat meets FMVSS.213 certification and 14 CFR 121.311 requirements. The CARES harness label cites 14 CFR 21.305(d) verbatim.

  2. 2

    Request supervisor

    Please call an Allegiant supervisor or station manager. I have a confirmed window seat and an FAA-approved restraint.

    Please call an Allegiant supervisor or station manager. I have a confirmed window seat and an FAA-approved restraint.

  3. 3

    File DOT/Allegiant complaint

    Document badge numbers, photograph the seat and labels, log an Allegiant Customer Care complaint (702-505-8888), and file a DOT Aviation Consumer Protection complaint within 30 days.

Context

Car Seat on Independent US Carriers

See Allegiant compared to alliance peers at a glance.

Frontier Airlines
yes
Frontier publishes a 17.4" (A319/A320) and 16.5" (A321) min seat width — explicit and more conservative than Allegiant; only US carrier permitting booster use during cruise.
Southwest Airlines
yes
Southwest requires window seat + FAA-approved label; explicit liability disclaimer: 'Southwest Airlines will not assume liability for damage to ... car seats.'
JetBlue Airways
yes
JetBlue: car seats only on A321 Classic Mint (32S), banned on A321 LR (3NL) and A321 NEO Mint (3NS); explicit damage disclaimer.
Alaska Airlines
yes
Alaska requires both FMVSS and 'certified for aircraft use' labels; not in rows 1-4 on Embraer E175.
Common Questions

Allegiant + Car Seat: FAQ

Yes — per Allegiant's published policy, FAA-approved car seats are allowed in cabin (with a purchased ticket for the child) and free as gate or counter check (one per fare-paying passenger). The seat must display FMVSS.213 certification or 'certified for use in motor vehicles and aircraft' labeling, and must be installed in a window seat (never aisle, exit row, or rows directly fore/aft of an exit row). Source: allegiantair.com/customer-service/traveling-with-children.

Per Allegiant's published policy, car seats wider than 17.88 inches are unlikely to fit on A319 and A320 cabin seats — Allegiant is one of only two US airlines (Frontier is the other) that publishes a specific aircraft-seat-width number. Measure your car seat's widest point including side wings before booking. Wider seats are still allowed as gate-check; they just may not install in cabin. Source: allegiantair.com.

No — per Allegiant: one car seat per fare-paying passenger is free as counter check or gate check. There is no Allegiant baggage fee for a car seat. In-cabin use requires a purchased adult ticket for the child (lap infants under 24 months may travel free in a parent's arms, in which case the car seat is checked rather than installed). Source: allegiantair.com.

Yes — Allegiant is uniquely specific on CARES: 'The only harness-type device approved by the FAA is the AmSafe Aviation CARES. It is designed for children weighing between 22 and 44 pounds and must include a label that says FAA Approved in Accordance with 14CFR 21.305(d), Approved for Aircraft Use Only.' No US airline cites the CFR number more clearly. Source: allegiantair.com/customer-service/traveling-with-children.

No — per Allegiant verbatim: 'Backless booster seats, safety belt extensions ... and vest or harness devices ... are banned for use on aircraft by the FAA.' Allegiant interprets the federal 14 CFR 121.311(c)(1) booster ban as a full onboard prohibition (not just during taxi/takeoff/landing). Frontier is the only US carrier permitting booster use during the cruise phase. Source: allegiantair.com.

Per Allegiant verbatim: window seat only; never aisle, never between two passengers, never in the exit row, never in the rows directly in front of or behind an exit row. Confirm the window assignment at booking or at the gate agent before boarding — there is no Allegiant published Family Bundle that guarantees a car-seat-compatible window. Source: allegiantair.com.

Per RL10, Allegiant's Contract of Carriage applies — there is no baby-gear-specific disclaimer on the child-travel page. Domestic liability cap is $4,700 (14 CFR 254.4, effective Jan 22, 2025), though carriers often invoke fragile-item exclusions. Photograph the seat at counter or gate check, file a damaged-baggage report with Allegiant Baggage Service (866-719-3910) within 24 hours, and escalate to DOT (202-366-2220) if denied. Source: transportation.gov.

Not as a published zone. Per RL12, Allegiant's family pre-boarding is reliable in practice but is announced only as part of the disability/additional-time call. Listen for that call and step up with the lap-infant boarding pass or window-seat car-seat assignment. There is no published 'Family Bundle pre-board' comparable to Southwest's legacy A-list. Source: allegiantair.com + RL12.

Sources

  1. 1Allegiant Air — Traveling with Children (2026) — Verbatim car-seat policy + CARES + booster ban. Source
  2. 2FAA — Flying with Children (2025) — 14 CFR 121.311 + Kids' Corner guidance. Source
  3. 3FAA — CARES Harness Approval (14 CFR 21.305(d)) (2025) — Federal approval citation referenced in Allegiant policy. Source
  4. 4TSA — Child Car Seat (2026) — Federal screening guidance for car seats. Source
  5. 5DOT — Baggage Liability ($4,700 domestic / 1,519 SDR international) (2025) — 14 CFR 254.4 effective Jan 22, 2025 + Montreal Convention update. Source
  6. 6Simple Flying — Allegiant PGD family removal (2026) — Verified March 2026 incident report. Source

Audit Trail

Every verification is logged. If the airline changes their policy, this page changes with it.

May 29, 2026Re-verified Allegiant CARES + 17.88" + booster-ban verbatimUnchanged
Apr 12, 2026Quarterly review of allegiantair.com/customer-service/traveling-with-childrenUnchanged
Mar 15, 2026Added Flight 608 PGD/IND parent-experience story to briefRe-verified
Reviewed by
Sophia Marchetti
Sophia Marchetti
Founder & CPST, Velivolo
CPST Certified Passenger Safety Technician · 12 years family travel research
Read full author bio
CPST Certified Reviewed quarterly
Allegiant Support
+1-702-505-8888

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