I'd like to tell you about some bad purchasing experiences I've had, the last of which happened yesterday. I feel pretty frustrated and I think that sharing this will both let me vent my frustration and possibly help someone.
I'm writing from the European Union but I think that similar situations can happen everywhere.
• first bad buying experience: 2009. Back then, my brother decided to present me with a premium helmet for my first supermoto. He said that safety is very important and that he wanted to make sure my head was protected. We went to a reputable motorcycle gear shop and bought it. Years later, I found out a label on the chinstrap that read something like this: "this helmet should be replaced within 5 years from the first use or 7 years from the production date, whichever comes first.". One row below, the production year was printed: it was 2003, i. e. 6 years before the purchase date! Basically that helmet had a supposed remaining life of 1 year when I bought it!
• Second bad experience: yesterday. I needed to replace an old helmet and so I went to a shop specialized in motorcycle helmets, bought one and when I got home I looked for the homologation label and I've found out that:
- it was produced 3 years and 4 months ago, so this one is pretty old, too,
- it has the ECE 22 05 homologation; well, that standard is roughly 20 years old and was eventually updated in 2021. The newer standard, the 06, is compulsory for all helmets produced from 2023, but according to two Italian magazines it's still legal to sell the ones with the older homologation until their stock is consumed completely.
This new standard is significantly more demanding than the older one.
I did some internet research and apparently in none of the two sales has been illegal.
After that first experience in 2009 I had decided the rule that I only buy new models so it's impossible that the helmet is old, but yesterday I just thought that I didn't want to go through that research again before entering a shop and that probably in 2009 I was just unlucky. It worked once when I found a physical shop whose helmets could be bought online, too: I memorized some new models, found one that fitted right in the shop and bought it. It turned out it had been produced one year before: acceptable.
I dislike buying gear from the internet because I want to try it, so I go to shops. Unfortunately, the 14 days return and refund policy that is valid on the internet is not valid in shops, at least here. I don't think I can demand to see the production date in a shop and I doubt the salespeople would be cooperative in that way. No law prevents them to sell me an old helmet and I'm afraid that if I start looking for a helmet that fits right, looks decently ventilated, is in the price reange I want and I also demand to read the production date, it will take me 10 hours and many arguments each time to buy a helmet.
That helmet I bought yesterday is actually a cheap helmet: an [EDIT from December 26th 2025: deleted brand and model, see post #6 below], since according to my experience, the physics I know about impacts and about motocross and the features advertised for more expensive ones, I for one don't think that, for motocross, a premium helmet is a good investment, which is my own, unpopular, personal opinion. The seller also told me he didn't have any medium level motocross helmet, only cheap or expensive and that in his opinion the more expensive ones didn't justify their price. It just reinforced my theory. Still, I don't want to use a helmet whose materials have supposedly lost their properties because of age. Therefore, I guess that I will use this helmet for three years and then I'll replace it.
I'm writing from the European Union but I think that similar situations can happen everywhere.
• first bad buying experience: 2009. Back then, my brother decided to present me with a premium helmet for my first supermoto. He said that safety is very important and that he wanted to make sure my head was protected. We went to a reputable motorcycle gear shop and bought it. Years later, I found out a label on the chinstrap that read something like this: "this helmet should be replaced within 5 years from the first use or 7 years from the production date, whichever comes first.". One row below, the production year was printed: it was 2003, i. e. 6 years before the purchase date! Basically that helmet had a supposed remaining life of 1 year when I bought it!
• Second bad experience: yesterday. I needed to replace an old helmet and so I went to a shop specialized in motorcycle helmets, bought one and when I got home I looked for the homologation label and I've found out that:
- it was produced 3 years and 4 months ago, so this one is pretty old, too,
- it has the ECE 22 05 homologation; well, that standard is roughly 20 years old and was eventually updated in 2021. The newer standard, the 06, is compulsory for all helmets produced from 2023, but according to two Italian magazines it's still legal to sell the ones with the older homologation until their stock is consumed completely.
This new standard is significantly more demanding than the older one.
I did some internet research and apparently in none of the two sales has been illegal.
After that first experience in 2009 I had decided the rule that I only buy new models so it's impossible that the helmet is old, but yesterday I just thought that I didn't want to go through that research again before entering a shop and that probably in 2009 I was just unlucky. It worked once when I found a physical shop whose helmets could be bought online, too: I memorized some new models, found one that fitted right in the shop and bought it. It turned out it had been produced one year before: acceptable.
I dislike buying gear from the internet because I want to try it, so I go to shops. Unfortunately, the 14 days return and refund policy that is valid on the internet is not valid in shops, at least here. I don't think I can demand to see the production date in a shop and I doubt the salespeople would be cooperative in that way. No law prevents them to sell me an old helmet and I'm afraid that if I start looking for a helmet that fits right, looks decently ventilated, is in the price reange I want and I also demand to read the production date, it will take me 10 hours and many arguments each time to buy a helmet.
That helmet I bought yesterday is actually a cheap helmet: an [EDIT from December 26th 2025: deleted brand and model, see post #6 below], since according to my experience, the physics I know about impacts and about motocross and the features advertised for more expensive ones, I for one don't think that, for motocross, a premium helmet is a good investment, which is my own, unpopular, personal opinion. The seller also told me he didn't have any medium level motocross helmet, only cheap or expensive and that in his opinion the more expensive ones didn't justify their price. It just reinforced my theory. Still, I don't want to use a helmet whose materials have supposedly lost their properties because of age. Therefore, I guess that I will use this helmet for three years and then I'll replace it.
