Most manufacturers recommend replacing your bicycle helmet every 3 to 5 years from first use, though surprising research shows the EPS foam liner may stay effective for much longer if the helmet has never been crashed.
That 3–5 year window is the standard answer, and it is the safe one: UV light, temperature swings, and sweat degrade materials slowly, and a new helmet gets the latest safety tech like MIPS. But here is where the advice gets interesting — the engineering firm MEA Forensic tested 675 helmets aged zero to 26 years and found no measurable decline in impact performance from age alone. So the real question is not “when does the calendar say replace it?” but “has this helmet taken a hit, and do I trust its materials?”
The table below lays out exactly what each major brand and safety authority recommends, and then we will walk through the inspection steps that matter more than the date stamped on the strap.
Helmet Lifespan Recommendations By Brand
The 3–5 year range covers nearly every manufacturer, but the start date and reasoning vary. KASK and Bell land on the conservative 3-year end; the Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute sticks with 5. The table keeps it straight.
| Brand / Source | Recommended Lifespan | Key Nuance |
|---|---|---|
| KASK | ~3 years | From first use or purchase; sunlight intensity affects the rate |
| Bell | 3 years | BHSI notes this may be aggressive marketing; shifted from 5 |
| Giro | 2–5 years | Distributor recommends 3 due to everyday “knocking and pressing” |
| Trek Bikes | 3 years | Parts lose strength over time even without an impact |
| Julbo | 3–5 years | Materials degrade from environmental factors even when stored |
| MIPS | 3–5 years | Daily use accelerates sun and UV wear |
| Consumer Reports | ~5 years | Cites MEA Forensic research showing foam stays stable for decades |
| BHSI | 5 years | Most manufacturers historically agreed; 3-year shift may be commercial |
When A Helmet Must Be Replaced Immediately
Age is a guideline. Impact is a hard rule: any crash, even a low-speed one where the helmet hits pavement, compromises the foam permanently. Always replace after a crash regardless of visible damage.
Hard drops count too — if the helmet falls off a roof-rack or garage shelf hard enough to crack the foam, it is done. Replace immediately if the shell is cracked, dented, or shows separation from the foam liner. Helmets from before 1984 lack ANSI and CPSC standards entirely and belong in recycling, not on a head. If you cannot find a CPSC, ASTM, or Snell sticker inside the helmet, replace it.
Fit is another non-negotiable: a helmet that no longer sits level or feels loose after adjusting the retention system has compressed foam and needs replacing. If you are in the market for a new helmet and space is a concern, our tested collapsible helmet roundup covers models that pack small without sacrificing safety certification.
How To Inspect Your Helmet At Home
Even within the 3–5 year window, a visual and tactile inspection catches problems the date sticker misses. Run through these three checks before every season and after any hard knock.
Check The Outer Shell
Look for cracks, dents, or fading color. Fading is a sign of UV damage that weakens the shell. If the shell separates from the foam liner at any edge, the helmet is compromised.
Check The EPS Foam Liner
Remove the liner pads and examine the white expanded-polystyrene foam. Cracks, compressed sections, or areas that feel brittle mean replacement time. Damage here may not be visible from the outside.
Check The Straps And Buckles
Frayed webbing, broken buckles, or a split-adjuster dial mean the helmet cannot hold properly in a crash. If the fit changes noticeably after adjustment, the foam has compressed too much to trust.
Care That Extends The Safe Window
Proper storage gets a helmet closer to the 5-year end of the range. Keep it in a cool, dry place out of direct sunlight — never a hot car trunk, garage shelf in summer, or a car’s rear window. Clean with mild soap and water only; harsh chemicals like solvents and fuels dissolve the foam. A soft bag for transport prevents shell scratches.
The MEA Forensic study that tested helmets up to 26 years old found that uncrashed helmets stored reasonably well kept their impact performance. That does not mean a 20-year-old helmet is advisable — newer models bring rotational-impact protection and better ventilation — but it does confirm that a well-cared-for 4-year-old helmet that has never been dropped is likely still doing its job.
Helmet Replacement Checklist
This quick checklist consolidates every rule into one decision set so you know whether to ride or replace.
- Crash or hard drop? Replace immediately, no exceptions.
- Over 5 years old? Replace — even if it looks clean.
- Missing safety sticker (CPSC/ASTM/Snell)? Replace.
- Pre-1984 helmet? Replace; no modern standard.
- Visible cracks, dents, shell separation, or foam compression? Replace.
- Frayed straps or broken buckle? Replace.
- Fit feels loose after tightening? Replace (foam compressed).
- 3–5 years old, no damage, stored carefully? Keep riding, but inspect annually.
The honest bottom line: most cyclists replace too late after a crash and too early on the calendar. Let the impact rule — not the date — make the decision, but whichever camp you fall into, a certified new helmet from a trusted brand is a cheap insurance policy against the one ride you never expect to end badly.
FAQs
Does a helmet expire if I never wore it?
Yes. The materials still degrade from exposure to air, humidity, and heat even in a box. Manufacturers date the lifespan from first use or purchase, not from first crash. An unused helmet sitting in a garage for six years should be replaced.
Is a 10-year-old helmet still safe if it looks new?
Probably not for primary use. While MEA Forensic testing showed foam performance stable past 10 years, modern helmets include rotational-impact systems like MIPS that older models lack. A 10-year-old helmet is fine as a spare for a guest rider, not for daily riding.
Does sweat damage the helmet over time?
Sweat does not directly dissolve EPS foam, but the moisture and salts can accelerate corrosion of metal buckles and degrade the liner pads over years of heavy use. Removing pads for regular washing and air-drying the helmet after a hot ride helps.
Should I replace a helmet after a minor handlebar bump?
A light knock against a doorframe or a drop from waist height probably does not compromise the foam. The rule is: if the impact was hard enough to crack the shell or compress the foam, replace it. If the helmet hit the ground with your head inside, replace it—the foam crushed during that impact.
Do collapsible helmets have the same lifespan as standard ones?
Yes. Folding and collapsible helmets use the same EPS foam and must meet the same CPSC and ASTM standards. The lifespan rule — 3 to 5 years or after any crash — applies identically. Their folding mechanism may add inspection points for hinge wear, but the foam replacement schedule does not change.
References & Sources
- MIPS. “How Long Do Helmets Last?” States the 3–5 year guideline and notes daily use accelerates UV wear.
- Julbo. “How Long Do Bike Helmets Last? A Guide to Helmet Lifespan and Replacement.” Inspection steps, maintenance instructions, and storage recommendations.
- KASK. “Replacement.” Official 3-year replacement recommendation from KASK.
- Consumer Reports. “When You Really Need to Replace Your Bike Helmet.” Covers MEA Forensic research and the ~5-year practical recommendation.
- Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute. “Helmet Replacement.” Industry-standard 5-year guideline and notes on marketing influence in shorter replacement periods.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.