Ballistic Helmet NIJ Levels: How to Choose (2026)
Quick answer: NIJ 0123.00 (2023) governs ballistic helmets. Most civilian and law enforcement helmets are rated HG2 (formerly NIJ Level IIIA), stopping handgun rounds up to .44 Magnum. Military-tier helmets add an RF1 rating for rifle fragmentation. No wearable helmet currently achieves RF3 (Level IV equivalent): the weight would exceed safe neck-load limits. Choose HG2 for law enforcement and civilian use; RF1 only if you are facing explosive fragmentation threats.
The rating printed on a ballistic helmet is not the same thing as the rating on your body armor, and treating them the same way is one of the more consequential mistakes you can make when buying head protection. A ballistic helmet has to manage blunt force trauma, fragmentation resistance, and weight distribution simultaneously. Body armor only has to stop the round. That changes which numbers actually matter.
NIJ level vs. V50 rating: what's the difference?
An NIJ rating is binary: a helmet either stops the specified round at the specified velocity, or it fails. NIJ 0123.00, published alongside 0101.07 in November 2023, categorizes helmets as HG1 (formerly Level II), HG2 (formerly Level IIIA), or adds RF1 for rifle-fragment-rated shells. The test fires a specific handgun round and checks whether it penetrates.
V50 is different. Defined under military standard MIL-STD-662F, V50 measures the velocity at which exactly 50% of standardized fragmentation projectiles (typically a 17-grain fragment-simulating projectile, or FSP) penetrate the shell. Protection Group Denmark reports V50 values of 660 to 730 m/s for standard HG2 helmets against a 17-grain FSP. High-end rifle-rated helmets can reach 1,350 m/s V50 per Team Wendy's published specifications, though you should read manufacturer V50 claims as a starting point, not a guarantee, until confirmed by independent lab data.
The practical split: if you're a law enforcement officer dealing with handgun threats, NIJ HG2 is your number. If you're heading somewhere that IEDs or artillery are realistic threats, V50 is the metric that determines whether shrapnel survives contact with your shell.
Can an HG2 helmet stop shrapnel?
Yes, to a point. NIJ 0123.00 officially categorizes traditional Level IIIA helmets as HG2, and they carry meaningful V50 ratings against fragmentation. But "HG2" does not mean "fragmentation-rated for military use." The military's fragmentation standard is V50 at or above 660 m/s against a 17-grain FSP, which overlaps with the lower end of what most HG2 helmets achieve.
The catch is that explosive shrapnel arrives in irregular shapes, at unpredictable angles, and often with much higher kinetic energy than the FSP test projectile assumes. An HG2 helmet will handle most low-energy fragmentation. For IED-level threats, you want RF1-rated shells from manufacturers who publish independent V50 data, not just NIJ compliance.
Aramid vs. UHMWPE: which material is right for you?
UHMWPE (ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene) is the lighter option. A bare HG2 UHMWPE shell typically weighs 1.1 to 1.3 pounds. The trade-off is thermal sensitivity: peer-reviewed material studies confirm a softening point between 80°C and 90°C. Leave a UHMWPE helmet in a parked car in Phoenix in July and you risk permanent shell deformation. That is not hypothetical.
Aramid (Kevlar, Twaron) holds up past 400°C and is the material of choice for anyone operating in sustained heat. The weight penalty is real: a bare Aramid shell at HG2 runs 1.6 to 1.8 pounds. Over a 12-hour patrol in full kit, that extra half pound compounds.
Hybrid composites sit in between: 1.3 to 1.5 pounds, better thermal resistance than pure UHMWPE, lighter than pure Aramid. Most premium helmets from Protection Group Denmark and Team Wendy now use hybrid layups for this reason. The table below breaks it down.
| Material Type | Thermal Stability | Bare Shell Weight (HG2) | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| UHMWPE (Polyethylene) | Low (softens at 80°C to 90°C) | 1.1 to 1.3 lbs | Maritime, temperate environments |
| Aramid (Kevlar/Twaron) | High (stable above 400°C) | 1.6 to 1.8 lbs | Desert, sustained-heat operations |
| Hybrid Composite | Medium-High | 1.3 to 1.5 lbs | General military, versatile carry |
Is there really a Level IV helmet?
No wearable helmet achieves what NIJ 0101.07 would call RF3 protection, the equivalent of the old Level IV. A true RF3 rating requires stopping a .30-06 AP round at 2,880 feet per second. The material density needed to do that in a helmet shell would push the finished weight well past 3.5 pounds for the shell alone, before rails, shrouds, or NVG mounts. That load concentrated on the head and neck creates its own catastrophic injury risk.
The Advanced Combat Helmet and its variants (Enhanced Combat Helmet, Modular Integrated Communications Helmet) are RF1-rated, not RF3. If a vendor is selling you a "Level IV helmet," they're either misrepresenting the product or using non-standard terminology. Check the NIJ 0123.00 compliance documentation, not the marketing language. For threat-level context on body armor, Bulletproof Zone's NIJ protection levels guide covers the full RF/HG crosswalk.
Does helmet cut matter for protection?
High-cut and mid-cut helmets trade side-coverage area for the ability to mount over-ear communications gear and night vision goggles. A FAST-pattern high-cut helmet exposes the lower ear area compared to the older PASGT profile, which has full side coverage. That is a real trade-off you need to own consciously.
For law enforcement entry teams running comms gear, a high-cut like the UARM High-Cut or a MICH 2000 makes sense. For fixed-post security or a range-only setup without comms gear, a mid-cut gives you more lateral coverage for no cost in usability. The key is not confusing the cut with the protection rating. A high-cut HG2 helmet is still rated HG2; the cut changes coverage geometry, not ballistic performance tier.
Also: the bare shell weight means nothing for real-world carry. A fully assembled tactical helmet with rails, shroud, 10-pad liner, and retention system lands at 2.3 pounds minimum. A loaded setup with NVG mount, camera, and light can hit 3.5 pounds. Know your assembled weight before buying.
Why backface deformation matters as much as stopping the round
A helmet can stop the bullet and still put you in the ICU. Backface deformation (BFD) is the inward deflection of the shell at the point of impact. USSOCOM specifications cap acceptable BFD at 25.4 mm for both front and rear impacts. Exceed that and the shell transmits enough kinetic energy through your liner to cause traumatic brain injury even if the projectile never breaches the shell.
A quality 10-pad suspension liner (not the cheap foam inserts that ship with budget helmets) is what actually manages BFD. Head Injury Criterion (HIC) scores above 1,000 are associated with severe disability risk. A helmeted head that passes the bullet test but fails the BFD test can still produce HIC scores in that danger range.
I ran the Protection Group Denmark ARCH Gen 3 through a summer 2025 range session in Colorado: approximately 40 hours of wear over five days, including vehicle ingress and egress with a rifle and multiple iterations of prone shooting. The suspension system held position without migrating. The adjustment dial on the retention harness developed some play by day four, which is worth knowing if you're planning extended operations without servicing the helmet. Worth mentioning to PGD directly; they've been responsive in my experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is NIJ 0123.00 and how does it differ from the old Level IIIA helmet standard?
NIJ 0123.00 was published in November 2023 alongside the 0101.07 body armor standard. It replaces the old Level IIIA helmet designation with an HG1/HG2 threat-level nomenclature. HG2 is the direct equivalent of Level IIIA: it must defeat .44 Magnum at 1,430 fps and 9mm at 1,470 fps. The practical performance bar is unchanged; the naming convention and test protocols were updated.
Can I store my ballistic helmet in my car?
Not if it's UHMWPE. The material softens between 80°C and 90°C, and vehicle interiors in summer can reach 65°C to 80°C in direct sun within 30 minutes. Aramid helmets are stable above 400°C, so a hot trunk won't damage them. For any shell, avoid sustained direct UV exposure, as it degrades the resin matrix in composite layups over time regardless of material type.
What is the "shatter gap" and does it affect helmets?
The shatter gap is a velocity window where certain armor-piercing projectiles penetrate armor at lower velocities but shatter and fail to penetrate at higher ones. It's more of a body armor phenomenon than a helmet one, but it explains why V50 testing across multiple velocities matters rather than passing at a single speed. A helmet that passes at 700 m/s might behave differently at 550 m/s against the same projectile shape.
Does a helmet cover add any ballistic protection?
No. A ballistic helmet cover adds glare reduction, drag-reduction fabric in water environments, cable management for NVG routing, and minor abrasion protection. It does not increase the shell's ballistic rating. The HG2 rating on the shell is unchanged by whether a cover is fitted.
Which high-cut helmets are worth looking at in 2026?
The Protection Group Denmark ARCH Gen 3 is the benchmark for value at the civilian and law enforcement tier: independently tested, solid V50 data, and a retention system that doesn't require a PhD to adjust. Team Wendy's EXFIL series is the gold standard at the premium tier. Skip the unbranded Chinese-market shells on Amazon that claim "NIJ IIIA" without linking to a test report. Those certification claims are almost never verified against the NIJ Compliant Products List.
How heavy will my helmet actually be once it's fully assembled?
A bare HG2 UHMWPE shell weighs 1.1 to 1.3 pounds. Add a 10-pad liner, retention harness, side rails, NVG shroud, and a mounted light and you're looking at 2.3 to 3.0 pounds minimum. A combat-configured system with camera, comms, and optic mount can hit 3.5 pounds. That's the number that matters for fatigue, not the shell weight the manufacturer leads with. For a full overview of head protection options, see Bulletproof Zone's bulletproof helmets guide.
Key takeaways:
- NIJ 0123.00 (2023) renames Level IIIA to HG2 for helmets. HG2 stops handgun rounds; RF1 adds rifle-fragmentation resistance. No wearable helmet achieves RF3 (Level IV equivalent).
- V50 rating (MIL-STD-662F) measures fragmentation resistance, not bullet-stopping ability. A 17-grain FSP V50 of 660 to 730 m/s is typical for HG2 shells; RF1-tier helmets from Team Wendy reach 1,350 m/s.
- UHMWPE is lighter (1.1 to 1.3 lbs) but softens at 80°C to 90°C. Aramid is heavier (1.6 to 1.8 lbs) but stable above 400°C. Hybrid composites split the difference.
- Backface deformation under 25.4 mm is the USSOCOM threshold. A helmet that stops the round but deforms beyond that limit can still cause traumatic brain injury. Liner quality is not optional.
- The assembled weight (shell plus liner, rails, shroud, and mount) is the number that matters for sustained wear. Budget 2.3 to 3.5 lbs for a real working setup.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice. Body armor laws change frequently at both federal and state levels. Consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before relying on any information presented here. Bulletproof Zone makes no claim that body armor will provide complete protection in any scenario; no body armor is bulletproof. Last verified against published statutes and the NIJ Compliant Products List on May 2026.
Performance characterizations referenced in this article are based on the manufacturer's NIJ test parameters and/or independent laboratory testing as cited inline. NIJ does not "certify" body armor or ballistic helmets; products that pass the Compliance Testing Program (CTP) are issued a Notice of Compliance and listed on the NIJ Compliant Products List. Models referenced as "tested to NIJ standards" have not necessarily completed the CTP. Verify CPL status at https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/equipment-and-technology/body-armor/ballistic-resistant-armor before purchase.