FAQs

BS 7928:2013 is the British Standard for cricket helmet safety, covering impact absorption and the grille face-gap. Any helmet used in ECB-affiliated match cricket must meet this standard. The updated BS 7928.1:2019 covers neck protectors separately.
Wrap a soft tape measure around your head, just above the eyebrows and around the widest part of the back of the skull. Note the measurement in centimetres and match it to our size chart. Most adults fall between 58-62cm.
Neck protectors are now standard at professional level and recommended for any batter facing bowling above 75mph. They are not yet mandatory in most club cricket but clip onto most modern helmets and add meaningful protection against short-pitched balls.
Replace a cricket helmet immediately after any direct high-speed impact to the grille or shell, even without visible damage. Beyond impacts, most helmets are designed to perform safely for three to five seasons of regular use before foam compression reduces protection.
Titanium grilles cut roughly 150-200g off total helmet weight compared with steel, reducing fatigue and neck strain over a long innings. They cost 2-3x more but are certified to the same BS 7928 standard. Most club cricketers are well-served by steel.
Not if the player's head measurement falls into adult range. Junior helmets are sized for smaller heads and use lighter shells - they do not meet the same impact-coverage area as adult helmets when worn by an adult. Always size the helmet to the head, not the age.