The best youth motocross goggles for 2026, ranked by price and lens performance. Youth-specific goggle frames fit smaller faces without slipping or creating cheek gaps, which is the number one complaint from parents buying adult goggles for younger riders. Here is what to look for and which goggles are worth the money at each price point.
Why Youth-Specific Goggle Frames Matter

An adult goggle frame on a small face creates two problems. First, the nose bridge sits too high, which puts the bottom of the frame on the cheeks instead of sealing against the face. Second, the strap anchors on the goggle sit too far apart for a narrow helmet's goggle channel, which means the goggles float or shift during the ride.
Youth frames are scaled to narrower face widths, shorter nose bridges, and the smaller helmet goggle channels used in youth sizing. The result is a seal that actually works and a goggle that stays put through a full moto. Younger riders who are still developing their skills need clear, unobstructed vision more than they need the same lens diameter as a 450 factory pilot.
What to Look for in Youth Motocross Goggles

Frame Fit and Face Foam
The foam seal is the most important part of goggle fit. Triple-layer foam with a fleece or moisture-wicking liner manages sweat and prevents the foam from dragging against the skin. Single-layer foam works on cooler days but saturates quickly in heat. Press the goggle gently against your child's face without fastening the strap: if it seals evenly with no gaps at the nose bridge or cheekbones, the fit is right. A gap at the nose bridge is the most common sign that a frame is running too large.
Lens Type and Anti-Fog Coating
Polycarbonate lenses with an anti-fog hard coating are the baseline. A dual-pane lens adds a trapped air layer between two lens surfaces, which provides better anti-fog performance than a single-pane with coating alone. For most youth riders, a single-pane anti-fog lens is sufficient. Dual-pane is worth the upgrade if your kid rides in humid or cool conditions where fogging is a regular issue.
Clear lenses are the versatile default. Smoke and mirror lenses reduce glare in bright sun but can create vision problems in shaded sections or overcast conditions. For younger riders still learning to read terrain, clear is the safer choice.
Tear-Off Compatibility
Youth racers need tear-off posts. Tear-off posts are molded into the frame and allow laminated plastic tear-offs to be stacked and pulled one at a time to clear mud and roost from the lens without stopping. If your kid races, the goggles must have tear-off posts. If they just practice, tear-offs are optional but useful.
Strap and Helmet Compatibility
A silicone-backed strap grips the helmet's goggle channel and does not slide during riding. A plain webbing strap migrates. Any goggle above the entry level uses silicone-backing. Check that the strap width matches your helmet's goggle channel width. Most youth helmets use a narrower channel than adult helmets, and most youth goggles are designed to match.
Best Youth Motocross Goggles for 2026
Best Entry-Level Pick: Fox Racing Main Core Goggle (Youth)
Price: Starting from $17.97
The Fox Racing Main Core Goggle (Youth) is the best starting point for young riders who need real moto protection at an accessible price. The Main Core uses Fox's Variable Lens System (VLS), which is the key feature: the same frame accepts both standard polycarbonate lenses and injection-molded hard lenses. Buying a better lens down the road does not require a new goggle frame.
Features
Triple-layer face foam with a fleece liner handles sweat during extended sessions. A non-slip silicone strap keeps the goggle in the helmet's channel. The frame includes a third tear-off post mounted on the strap, which is a thoughtful addition that makes tear-offs easier to install and remove. The Lexan lens includes UV protection. Best-in-class viewport for a youth goggle at this price point gives solid peripheral vision.
Why It's a Top 2026 Pick
The VLS compatibility means this goggle grows with your kid's riding level. Start with the stock lens. When they start racing and need a cleaner anti-fog solution, upgrade the lens without touching the frame. Fox quality at this price is hard to beat.
Best Budget Premium Pick: 100% Strata 2 Goggle (Youth)

Price: $25.00
The 100% Strata 2 Goggle in Youth sizing is 100%'s dedicated youth frame. The Strata 2 uses the same lens and tear-off system as the Racecraft 2 and Accuri 2 — a cross-compatibility that matters when buying replacement lenses and tear-offs at the track. One part number fits all three frames.
Features
Ultra-thick double-layer face foam manages sweat on longer rides. A 40mm silicone-backed strap keeps the goggle locked in the helmet channel. The 9-point lens retention system secures the lens in the frame so it does not pop out in a fall. Anti-fog coated polycarbonate lens with a wide field of view. Tear-off posts are integrated for racers.
Why It's a Top 2026 Pick
At $25, the 100% Strata 2 Youth is one of the best-value youth goggles on the market. The cross-compatibility with Racecraft 2 and Accuri 2 lenses and tear-offs means replacement parts are easy to find at any race venue. 100% is the goggle brand of choice at every level of Pro Motocross, and the youth frame delivers that same lens quality to smaller faces.
Best Mid-Range Pick: Alpinestars Supertech Vision Merica Goggles (Youth)
Price: $36.95
The Alpinestars Supertech Vision Merica Youth Goggles step up the frame construction with a lightweight Polyflex build that conforms to the face better than rigid injection frames. The silicone-backed strap with 40mm width locks into the helmet channel. Multi-layer foam with a fleece lining prevents hot spots at the cheeks and nose bridge.
Features
Polycarbonate lens with anti-fog hard coat and 100% UVA protection. Integrated tear-off posts. Molded wind channels push air through the vent foam to improve airflow and reduce fogging during high-intensity riding. The flexible Polyflex frame is more forgiving of youth-sized helmets that do not have perfectly rigid goggle channels.
Why It's a Top 2026 Pick
The Merica colorway is a standout on the track and the Polyflex frame fits a wider range of youth face shapes than harder-shelled frames. If your kid has had fit issues with more rigid goggle frames, this is the one to try.
Best Upgrade Pick: 100% Racecraft 2.0 Goggle
Price: $52.00
When youth riders grow into teen sizing, adult-framed goggles start fitting correctly. The 100% Racecraft 2.0 is the natural upgrade from the youth Strata 2 because both use the same lens platform. The Racecraft 2.0 provides a larger viewport than the youth frame, better anti-fog performance, and an expanded range of lens options.
Features
Near-limitless field of view designed around 100%'s top athlete feedback. Ultra-thick double-layer face foam. 40mm silicone-coated strap. 9-point lens retention. Anti-fog polycarbonate lens. Triple tear-off post support for racers running multiple tear-off layers.
Why It's a Top 2026 Pick
For youth riders who have outgrown the youth frame sizing or older teens with adult-scale faces, the Racecraft 2.0 is where the performance jumps noticeably. Same lens ecosystem as the Strata 2, better frame proportions for medium and larger faces, and the option to run up to three stacked tear-offs per post for mud races.
Youth Motocross Goggle Comparison Table
| Goggle | Price | Frame | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fox Main Core Youth | From $17.97 | Youth | Entry-level, VLS lens upgrade path |
| 100% Strata 2 Youth | $25.00 | Youth | Best value, shared lens ecosystem |
| Alpinestars Supertech Vision Youth | $36.95 | Youth | Flexible fit, standout graphics |
| 100% Racecraft 2.0 | $52.00 | Adult | Upgrade for teens, expanded viewport |
Goggle Lens Color Guide for Youth Riders
Clear lenses work in all light conditions and are the default for most youth riders. A clear anti-fog lens on a sunny day is better than a smoke lens in shadows. Smoke lenses reduce glare but flatten terrain contrast. Yellow or rose-tinted lenses enhance contrast and help riders read terrain depth on overcast days, which is valuable in low-light morning practice sessions. For one lens that covers most conditions, clear is always the right starting point.
Caring for Youth Goggles
Rinse mud off the frame and strap after every ride before it dries into the foam. Dry the lens by letting it air out rather than wiping it. Wiping a dusty lens with anything other than the included microfiber bag scratches the anti-fog coating. Store goggles in the included bag to protect the lens between rides. Replace the foam annually or when it compresses to the point where it no longer seals against the face.
Shop Youth Motocross Goggles at BTO Sports

BTO Sports carries the full range of motocross goggles for youth and adult riders. Browse the complete youth motocross gear collection to match goggles with a full kit. For helmet fit guidance that affects goggle compatibility, read the Youth Motocross Helmet Size Guide.