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Helmet Usage Laws

  • Laws requiring all motorcyclists to wear a helmet are in place in 20 states and the District of Columbia
  • Laws requiring only some motorcyclists to wear a helmet are in place in 27 states
  • There is no motorcycle helmet use law in 3 states (Illinois, Iowa, and New Hampshire)
  • Some bicyclists are required by law to wear a helmet in 21 states and the District of Columbia
  • There is no bicycle helmet use law in 29 states

     The history of motorcycle helmet laws in the United States is characterized by change. In 1967, to increase motorcycle helmet use, the federal government required the states to enact helmet use laws in order to qualify for certain federal safety programs and highway construction funds. The federal incentive worked. By the early 1970s, almost all the states had universal motorcycle helmet laws ("universal" in the sense that they covered all riders). Michigan was the first state to repeal its law in 1968, beginning a pattern of repeal, reenactment, and amendment of motorcycle helmet laws. In 1976, states successfully lobbied Congress to stop the Department of Transportation from assessing financial penalties on states without helmet laws. By 1980, most states had repealed or limited their motorcycle helmet laws to cover riders younger than 18, but not older riders. Later states that had repealed the law, reinstated it but only for young riders. All but 3 states (Illinois, Iowa, and New Hampshire) now require some or all motorcyclists to wear helmets. Since 1997, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Texas have changed their laws covering all riders to apply only to young riders. And most recently, Louisiana moved from a partial to a universal motorcycle helmet law.

     The changes in helmet laws have created a natural laboratory for researchers to study the effects of the laws on helmet use rates and on motorcycle deaths and head injuries. Helmet use rates approach 100 percent under universal laws (currently, in 20 states and the District of Columbia), but partial laws that cover only some motorcyclists (currently, in 27 states) are widely disobeyed. Repeatedly, research has shown that universal helmet laws reduce deaths and serious injuries among motorcyclists. The sharp reductions in helmet use resulting from weakening or repealing motorcycle helmet laws are followed by significant increases in injuries and deaths. Research in Texas is illustrative. The universal helmet law in Texas is estimated to have saved 650 lives between 1968 when it went into effect and 1977 when it was first amended. The amended law covered only riders younger than 18 and its enactment was followed by a 35 percent increase in motorcyclist fatalities. Texas reinstated universal coverage in 1989. Helmet use which had dropped to 41 percent under the partial law, promptly rose to 98 percent and serious injury crashes per registered motorcycle decreased by 11 percent. The pattern repeated in 1997 when Texas again rolled back the law to apply only to riders younger than 21. In less than a year, helmet use was down to 66 percent, and operator fatalities increased 31 percent in the first full year of the new law. For references and further research, see Q&A: Motorcycle helmet use laws.

StateAll RidersYounger Riders
AlabamaYesNo
AlaskaNo17 and Younger
ArizonaNo17 and Younger
ArkansasNo20 and Younger
CaliforniaYesNo
ColoradoNo17 and Younger and passengers under 17
ConnecticutNo17 and Younger
DelawareNo18 and Younger
District of ColumbiaYesNo
FloridaNo20 and Younger
GeorgiaYesNo
HawaiiNo17 and Younger
IdahoNo17 and Younger
IllinoisNo lawNo law
IndianaNo17 and Younger
IowaNo lawNo law
KansasNo17 and Younger
KentuckyNo20 and Younger
LouisianaYesNo
MaineNo14 and Younger
MarylandYesNo
MassachusettsYesNo
MichiganYesNo
MinnesotaNo17 and Younger
MississippiYesNo
MissouriYesNo
MontanaNo17 and Younger
NebraskaYesNo
NevadaYesNo
New HampshireNo LawNo Law
New JerseyYesNo
New MexicoNo17 and Younger
New YorkYesNo
North CarolinaYesNo
North DakotaNo17 and Younger
OhioNo17 and Younger
OklahomaNo17 and Younger
OregonYesNo
PennsylvaniaNo20 and Younger
Rhode IslandNo20 and Younger
South CarolinaNo20 and Younger
South Dakota17 and Younger
TennesseeYesNo
TexasNo20 and Younger
UtahNo17 and Younger
VermontYesNo
VirginiaYesNo
WashingtonYesNo
West VirginiaYesNo
WisconsinNo17 and Younger
WyomingNo17 and Younger