Nevada Bounce House Laws - AB198
Starting 1/1/2026, Nevada now has the strictest bounce house regulations in the country.
Celebrate Kids is in full compliance with this bill to meet the required safety standards for bounce houses in Nevada.
Any company not following these regulations is in violation of Nevada Law. This puts you and your guests at a higher risk of accidents & opens you up to accident litigation.
Here is a summary of Assembly Bill 198
All Bounce houses must be secured at each anchor point by an industry-approved stake or a minimum 75 Lb. weight.
There must be a sign out front of the bounce house with the required safety verbiage.
There must be an anemometer on site to record wind speed.
Each bounce house must have an operator (our staff or client) at all times while in use.
There must be a logbook available with each bouncer to document proper setup, wind speed, maintenance, and repairs.
After setting up the bounce house, the operator responsible for setup must complete an inspection of the bounce house to record that all safety measures are in place & record the wind speed in the logbook.
The company supplying the bounce house must have all proper business licenses and a $1,000,000+ insurance policy.
There are additional line items in the bill that are of less consequence to clients and are meant for companies to handle before or after events..
Those items and the full bill can be viewed HERE.
Celebrate Kids is in full compliance with this bill to meet the required safety standards for bounce houses in Nevada.
Any company not following these regulations is in violation of Nevada Law. This puts you and your guests at a higher risk of accidents & opens you up to accident litigation.
Here is a summary of Assembly Bill 198
All Bounce houses must be secured at each anchor point by an industry-approved stake or a minimum 75 Lb. weight.
There must be a sign out front of the bounce house with the required safety verbiage.
There must be an anemometer on site to record wind speed.
Each bounce house must have an operator (our staff or client) at all times while in use.
There must be a logbook available with each bouncer to document proper setup, wind speed, maintenance, and repairs.
After setting up the bounce house, the operator responsible for setup must complete an inspection of the bounce house to record that all safety measures are in place & record the wind speed in the logbook.
The company supplying the bounce house must have all proper business licenses and a $1,000,000+ insurance policy.
There are additional line items in the bill that are of less consequence to clients and are meant for companies to handle before or after events..
Those items and the full bill can be viewed HERE.