HANS Device Guide for HPDE & Time Trials

The HANS device is the most consequential piece of safety equipment after your helmet. It's also the one where the physics are most concrete: in a frontal impact, the HANS prevents the head from continuing forward after the torso has stopped — which is the mechanism behind basilar skull fractures, the leading cause of fatalities in otherwise survivable motorsport crashes.

This guide explains what HANS is, when it's required at HPDE and SCCA events, how to buy one that fits, and how to verify your helmet is compatible before you place an order.

What Is a HANS Device?

HANS stands for Head And Neck Support. It's a carbon fiber or composite yoke that sits across your shoulders and collarbone, with two tether straps that anchor to clips on the sides of your helmet. In a frontal impact, when your body is stopped by the harness, the helmet tethers limit how far your head can travel forward relative to your torso.

Without a HANS device, a frontal impact can cause the head to continue moving forward at speed even after the chest has stopped — a motion called "basilar skull" or "hangman's" injury. The HANS prevents that specific motion. It does not restrict your normal range of head motion during driving; you can still turn your head normally to check mirrors and blind spots.

The Physics in Plain Language

In a 60 mph frontal impact, your car's crumple zones and harness stop your torso in roughly 100–150 ms. Without a HANS, your head — anchored only by your neck — keeps traveling forward. The HANS tethers mean your head stops with your shoulders. That difference in deceleration rate is what prevents basilar skull fractures.

When Is HANS Required?

Requirements vary significantly by event type and organization. Here's the breakdown as of 2026:

Event / Run Group HANS Required? Notes
SCCA Solo (Autocross) Not required Speeds and course design don't warrant it at national ruleset level
SCCA Time Trials — Club Required at most Check TTR rule book; required for all runs with harness installed
SCCA Time Trials — National Required Mandatory for all classes
NASA HPDE 1–2 Not required Optional; recommended for drivers with existing harnesses
NASA HPDE 3 Required at some regions Strongly recommended; verify with your specific NASA region
NASA HPDE 4 Required at most regions De facto standard at this level; some regions enforce it strictly
GridLife Track Nation 1–2 Not required SA2020 helmet only for TN1-2
GridLife Track Nation 3+ Required Enforced at tech; no exceptions
GridLife Time Attack Required Full kit required; HANS part of mandatory equipment list
Any Wheel-to-Wheel Racing Required Universal requirement across SCCA, NASA, and most sanctioning bodies

Helmet Compatibility: Check This First

HANS devices connect to your helmet via two anchor clips called Hybrid clips (the standard) or HANS clips. Before buying a HANS device, verify that your helmet has these anchor posts installed. Most SA-rated helmets manufactured after 2010 include them, but not all — and older helmets sometimes don't have them.

To check: look at the lower sides of your helmet near the cheek area. You should see two D-ring or post-style anchor points, one on each side. If your helmet doesn't have them, some helmets can be retrofitted with an aftermarket anchor kit — but it's not guaranteed for every helmet model.

Verify Before You Buy

If you're buying a helmet and a HANS device at the same time, confirm the helmet includes HANS clips. Most modern SA2020 helmets (Zamp RZ-42Y, Bell Sport5, Arai) include them standard. The product listing or manufacturer spec sheet will say "HANS-compatible" or list anchor posts in the features.

FHR: The HANS Brand and Alternatives

HANS is a brand name that has become genericized, like Kleenex. The category is called FHR (Frontal Head Restraint). Any SFI 38.1 or FIA 8858-2010 rated FHR device is accepted at events that require "HANS." The clip system is standardized — all FHR devices use the same Hybrid/HANS clip interface and work with any compatible helmet.

The three main FHR devices in the market:

Sizing a HANS Device

HANS devices are sized primarily by collar width — the distance from the tip of one shoulder to the tip of the other, measured across the front of your collarbone. This determines which size yoke fits your frame. Getting this wrong is common and makes the device uncomfortable or less effective.

Standard HANS sizing:

HANS devices also come in different post angles — 10°, 20°, and 30°. The angle determines how the yoke sits relative to your body when you're in driving position. A 20° post angle works for most standard HPDE seating positions. Very upright seating positions (like a GT3-style seat with headrest) may benefit from a 30° device. Reclined positions in sports cars often work better with a 20° device.

How to Measure Collar Width

Sit in your normal driving position. Have someone measure the straight-line distance from the outside edge of your left shoulder (acromion) to the outside edge of your right shoulder. This is your collar width. Most medium-build adults measure 15–16 inches and fall into a Medium HANS.

HANS Device Picks

Best Overall  Editor's Pick
HANS Performance Series Device
SFI 38.1 + FIA 8858-2010 · Carbon fiber · Multiple sizes and angles · The industry standard FHR
~$550Summit / RaceQuip
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The HANS Performance Series is the most widely used FHR device in club racing. It's the benchmark everything else is compared to. Available in sizes Small through XL and 10°/20°/30° post angles. If you're unsure what to buy, buy this.

Best Value
Schroth HANS Device
SFI 38.1 certified · Composite construction · Slightly lighter than entry HANS · Good fit for most drivers
~$480Schroth Direct / Amazon
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Premium Alternative
Simpson Hybrid PRO
SFI 38.1 + FIA 8858 · Carbon construction · Slightly different geometry preferred by some · Used in pro motorsport
~$560Simpson / Summit
Check Price →

HANS Requires a Proper Harness

This is the most important caveat about HANS devices that many new drivers miss: a HANS device is significantly less effective with a factory seatbelt. The HANS tethers clip to the helmet and the shoulder portions of your harness. With a factory 3-point belt, the single diagonal shoulder belt provides weak and inconsistent force distribution. The HANS was designed to work with a 4-point or 6-point harness where two separate shoulder straps provide symmetric restraint across both shoulders.

If your car runs a factory seatbelt (as most HPDE 1-2 cars do), wearing a HANS is better than not wearing one — but the full benefit requires a proper racing harness. When you move to HPDE 4 or any competition event where HANS is required, a harness is also required for the same reason.

Setup Head Restraint Effectiveness Notes
No HANS + factory belt None Head fully unrestrained in frontal impact
HANS + factory belt Partial Better than nothing; asymmetric restraint reduces effectiveness
HANS + 4-point harness Full Designed configuration; proper symmetric shoulder restraint
HANS + 6-point harness Full Best configuration; anti-submarine crotch straps add further protection