SA vs M Rated Helmets: What's the Difference?
This is one of the most common and consequential helmet questions we get: "Can I use my motorcycle helmet for track days?" The short answer is no — not for road course events. But the longer answer matters, because the reasons behind that rule will help you buy the right helmet the first time and not waste money on gear that tech inspection will reject.
The Snell Memorial Foundation issues both the SA (Sport Application) and M (Motorcycle) ratings. They're both serious safety standards, but they test for completely different use cases. Understanding those differences is the foundation of buying smart.
The Core Difference: What Each Standard Tests
The Snell SA standard was specifically developed for closed-cockpit motorsport. The Snell M standard was developed for open-road motorcycle use. They share a common impact attenuation test — both ratings require the helmet to absorb energy from significant impacts — but the SA standard adds three critical tests that M does not have:
- Fire resistance (FMSS test): The SA rating requires the helmet shell and interior to resist fire for a minimum time period. In the event of a fuel fire in a car crash, an SA helmet provides crucial additional seconds. Motorcycle helmets don't have this requirement because motorcycle accidents rarely involve sustained fire in the way car racing accidents can.
- Rollover protection: SA helmets are tested with a "helmet penetration" test that evaluates protection against the helmet crushing into a roll cage, window frame, or other structures during a rollover. Motorcycles don't roll — so M helmets have no such test.
- Multi-impact testing: SA helmets are tested with two impacts to the same spot. This matters in racing, where a car can strike multiple surfaces in the same incident. M helmets are tested with two impacts but to different spots, reflecting motorcycle crash dynamics where multiple surface strikes are more dispersed.
An M-rated helmet is a fine piece of safety equipment — for motorcycle use. It is not appropriate for road course motorsport, and any reputable sanctioning body (NASA, GridLife, SCCA Time Trials) will not pass it at tech inspection. This is a real rule, enforced at real events.
Where M Helmets ARE Accepted
M-rated helmets occupy a specific niche in the rules landscape. SCCA Solo (autocross) is the most notable place where M helmets are sometimes permitted, because autocross events involve lower speeds, no sustained fire risk from car fuel systems, and no rollover scenarios in a staged parking lot.
However, even within SCCA Solo, this varies by region. The SCCA's national Solo rules historically allowed Snell M as a minimum for lower-level participation, but individual regions have their own tech inspection standards, and many now require SA. Always verify with your specific regional club before assuming an M helmet will pass tech.
- SCCA Solo (autocross): Often accepted, but varies by region — check your region's current rules
- HPDE events (NASA, GridLife, PCA, BMWCCA): Not accepted. SA2020 required at all road course events
- SCCA Time Trials: Not accepted. SA required
- GridLife Track Nation / Time Attack: Not accepted. SA2020 required, enforced strictly at tech
- NASA HPDE 1 and above: Not accepted
Rules change from year to year and vary by region. Before any event, read the supplemental regulations or contact the event organizer. Arriving at tech with a helmet that doesn't pass is a frustrating and expensive mistake — you're done for the day.
M vs SA: Practical Differences You'll Notice
Beyond the certification differences, SA and M helmets actually feel different to wear, for a few practical reasons:
Weight: M helmets are typically lighter than SA helmets at comparable price points. The fire-resistant materials in SA helmets add weight. A premium M helmet might weigh 2.8–3.2 lbs; a comparable SA helmet is often 3.0–3.6 lbs at entry-to-mid price, though high-end SA helmets (carbon shell, premium compounds) can get back into the 2.5 lb range.
Ventilation: M helmets tend to have better ventilation — more vents, larger duct sizes. This is because motorcycle riders are moving through open air at highway speeds with no climate control. Car drivers are in a cockpit, often with no forced ventilation. Some SA helmets have excellent ventilation (Bell, Arai), but as a category, M helmets run cooler on a hot day.
Visor opening: M helmets are designed for use without a window in front of the driver. SA helmets are often designed to work with a smaller visor opening, because the car's windshield provides additional eye protection and wind management. If you're doing kart racing (open air cockpit), SA helmets with a larger visor or a full-face shield are preferable.
FIA 8859: The SA Equivalent from Europe
If you're shopping internationally or looking at European-brand helmets, you'll encounter FIA 8859 certification. FIA 8859-2015 and FIA 8859-2018 are the European motorsport equivalents of Snell SA — they test for the same core capabilities: fire resistance, multi-impact protection, and rollover scenarios.
FIA 8859-certified helmets are accepted at essentially all events that accept Snell SA in the United States. If you find a Stilo, OMP, or Sparco helmet you like, an FIA 8859-2015 or 8859-2018 certification is fully legitimate and event-legal.
ECE 22.06 (also written ECE R22.06) is a different situation. ECE 22.06 is a European general motorcycle/moped standard. It is more similar to Snell M in its intended application and does not include fire resistance testing. ECE 22.06 helmets are not accepted at SCCA, NASA, or GridLife road course events in the US.
How to Read the Certification Sticker
Every compliant helmet has a certification sticker on the inside, typically in the crown area or on the chin bar. Here's what to look for and how to interpret it:
- SNELL SA2020: What you want. Current top-tier Snell motor racing standard. Accepted everywhere SA is required.
- SNELL SA2015: Still accepted at some events, but being phased out. Many sanctioning bodies have moved to requiring SA2020. Buy SA2020 for any new purchase.
- SNELL M2020: Motorcycle standard. Check your region's rules before assuming this passes at autocross; it does not pass at road course events.
- FIA 8859-2015 or FIA 8859-2018: Accepted at all events that accept Snell SA. Equivalent protection standard, different testing body.
- DOT only: Department of Transportation minimum. Legal for street use. Not accepted at motorsport events. Many novelty and budget helmets are DOT-only.
- ECE 22.06: European general standard. Not accepted at US road course events.
In a full-face helmet, look inside the crown of the helmet — the fabric liner area near the top. In open-face helmets, it's often on the chin bar interior or glued inside the shell near the side padding. If there is no sticker, the helmet is not certified, regardless of what's printed on the outside shell.
Comparison Table: SA2020 vs M2020 vs FIA 8859 vs ECE 22.06
| Standard | Fire Resistance | Rollover Test | Multi-Impact | Road Course | Autocross | Motorcycle |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Snell SA2020 | Yes — FMSS | Yes | Same site | Accepted | Accepted | Overkill |
| Snell M2020 | No | No | Different sites | Not accepted | Check region | Yes — designed for |
| FIA 8859-2015/18 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Accepted | Accepted | Overkill |
| ECE 22.06 | No | No | Limited | Not accepted | Not accepted | Yes — designed for |
| DOT only | No | No | No | Not accepted | Not accepted | Street legal only |
Bottom Line: What to Buy
If you are going to do any road course driving — HPDE, time trials, GridLife, NASA competition, SCCA Time Trials — buy a Snell SA2020 helmet. Do not buy an M-rated helmet for track use. You will be turned away at tech, and you'll end up buying an SA helmet anyway.
If you are exclusively doing SCCA Solo autocross and never plan to do road course driving, an M helmet may pass your regional tech, but we still recommend buying SA2020 for two reasons: it future-proofs you if you ever want to try HPDE, and the SA helmet costs essentially the same at entry level. The Zamp RZ-42Y SA2020 is around $200 — there is no meaningful cost savings to buying M for autocross-only use when the entry-level SA options are this affordable.
Buy the right helmet once. The $200 you might save buying an M helmet isn't worth showing up at a GridLife event and being turned away at registration.