Honda 2026+ Prelude BF1 Seat Back Protectors 08P30-36W-100
- Genuine Honda Product
- Optional Factory Accessory
- Protects Trunk Floor from Dirt, Spills, and Damage
- Compatible with BF1 Prelude
- Description
- Vehicle Fitment
- Included
-
Honda 2026+ Prelude BF1 Seat Back Protectors - 08P30-36W-100
You've been hauling stuff with your Prelude's rear seats folded down and the seat backs are getting scratched to hell? Part number 08P30-36W-100 is the OEM seat back protector set for 2026+ Prelude. These are hard plastic panels and fabric pieces that protect your rear seat backs when you're using them as a loading floor. Every time you fold the seats and slide something across them, you're tearing up the upholstery and scratching the plastic. A few months of loading bikes, skis, or lumber and your rear seats look like you've been using them as a workbench. These protectors stop that. The plastic panels take the beating instead of your seats.
Here's What Happens Without Protectors
The Prelude's got split folding rear seats. Fold them down and you've got a long loading surface from the trunk all the way up to the back of the front seats. That's great for hauling longer stuff. The problem is you're dragging everything across the seat backs. Sharp edges, rough boxes, dirty gear - it's all scraping on your seats. The upholstery tears, the vinyl gets scuffed, and the hard plastic trim pieces get scratched. Load something heavy and you're grinding it across the seat back trying to get it positioned. Your seats are taking abuse they weren't designed for. After a while they look beat. Torn fabric, permanent scuff marks, scratches everywhere. You can't really fix that without reupholstering the whole seat.
Hard Panels and Fabric Transition Pieces
You get two hard plastic panels - driver's side and passenger's side. They cover the seat backs when they're folded. The plastic's thick enough to handle cargo sliding across it without getting damaged. You also get two fabric transition pieces. These go between the folded seats and the trunk floor. Without them, there's a gap where the seat meets the trunk. Your cargo catches on that edge or falls into the gap. The fabric pieces fill that space so you've got a smooth surface from the trunk floor all the way up the seat backs. Makes loading and unloading way easier.
Velcro Installation Takes Two Minutes
The panels come with velcro already stuck to the back. You peel and stick the mating velcro strips onto your seat backs, press the panels on, done. No tools, no drilling, no permanent mounting. The velcro holds them in place while you're loading stuff but you can pull them off when you're not using them. If you're not hauling cargo that week, leave the panels off and your seats look normal. When you need them, stick them on. The whole installation's maybe two minutes for all four pieces. It's that easy.
Way Cheaper Than Fixing Damaged Seats
If you tear your seat upholstery or scratch up the seat backs, fixing it's a nightmare. The seats have to come out of the car. You're either getting the upholstery professionally repaired which is expensive, or you're living with seats that look trashed. These protectors cost a fraction of what seat repair costs and they prevent the damage from happening. If you're using your Prelude to haul anything regularly - bikes, snowboards, home depot runs, moving stuff - these protectors pay for themselves the first time they save your seats from getting destroyed.
What You Get
- Honda OEM seat back protector set (part number 08P30-36W-100)
- Two hard plastic panels (driver and passenger side)
- Two fabric transition pieces
- Pre-installed velcro on panels, plus velcro strips for seat backs
- Protects folded rear seats from scratches, scuffs, and tears
- Creates smooth loading surface from trunk to seat backs
Fits Your Car
- 2026+ Honda Prelude (BF1)
Note: Before you stick the velcro to your seat backs, clean them. Wipe them down with a damp cloth and let them dry. If the seat backs are dirty or dusty, the velcro won't stick and the panels will fall off when you're loading stuff. When you're applying the velcro, press hard for 30 seconds to make sure it bonds to the seat material. After you've stuck the velcro on, wait a few hours before you actually use the protectors. The adhesive needs time to cure. Don't just install the velcro and immediately start loading heavy cargo or you're peeling the velcro right back off. When you're positioning the fabric transition pieces, make sure they're actually filling the gap between the seats and the trunk floor. If they're not positioned right, your cargo's going to catch on the edge instead of sliding smoothly. Test it by running your hand across the transition from trunk to seats. It should feel relatively smooth. If you're hauling really dirty or greasy stuff, throw a tarp or blanket over the protectors. The plastic and fabric clean up fine but it's easier to wash a tarp than scrub grease out of fabric. Don't slam heavy stuff down on the plastic panels. They're durable but they're not bulletproof. Treat them like car interior parts, not like the bed of a pickup truck.
- 2026+ Honda Prelude
-
(2) Seat Back Protectors(2) Fabric Transition Panels










Description
- Genuine Honda Product
- Optional Factory Accessory
- Protects Trunk Floor from Dirt, Spills, and Damage
- Compatible with BF1 Prelude
- Description
- Vehicle Fitment
- Included
-
Honda 2026+ Prelude BF1 Seat Back Protectors - 08P30-36W-100
You've been hauling stuff with your Prelude's rear seats folded down and the seat backs are getting scratched to hell? Part number 08P30-36W-100 is the OEM seat back protector set for 2026+ Prelude. These are hard plastic panels and fabric pieces that protect your rear seat backs when you're using them as a loading floor. Every time you fold the seats and slide something across them, you're tearing up the upholstery and scratching the plastic. A few months of loading bikes, skis, or lumber and your rear seats look like you've been using them as a workbench. These protectors stop that. The plastic panels take the beating instead of your seats.
Here's What Happens Without Protectors
The Prelude's got split folding rear seats. Fold them down and you've got a long loading surface from the trunk all the way up to the back of the front seats. That's great for hauling longer stuff. The problem is you're dragging everything across the seat backs. Sharp edges, rough boxes, dirty gear - it's all scraping on your seats. The upholstery tears, the vinyl gets scuffed, and the hard plastic trim pieces get scratched. Load something heavy and you're grinding it across the seat back trying to get it positioned. Your seats are taking abuse they weren't designed for. After a while they look beat. Torn fabric, permanent scuff marks, scratches everywhere. You can't really fix that without reupholstering the whole seat.
Hard Panels and Fabric Transition Pieces
You get two hard plastic panels - driver's side and passenger's side. They cover the seat backs when they're folded. The plastic's thick enough to handle cargo sliding across it without getting damaged. You also get two fabric transition pieces. These go between the folded seats and the trunk floor. Without them, there's a gap where the seat meets the trunk. Your cargo catches on that edge or falls into the gap. The fabric pieces fill that space so you've got a smooth surface from the trunk floor all the way up the seat backs. Makes loading and unloading way easier.
Velcro Installation Takes Two Minutes
The panels come with velcro already stuck to the back. You peel and stick the mating velcro strips onto your seat backs, press the panels on, done. No tools, no drilling, no permanent mounting. The velcro holds them in place while you're loading stuff but you can pull them off when you're not using them. If you're not hauling cargo that week, leave the panels off and your seats look normal. When you need them, stick them on. The whole installation's maybe two minutes for all four pieces. It's that easy.
Way Cheaper Than Fixing Damaged Seats
If you tear your seat upholstery or scratch up the seat backs, fixing it's a nightmare. The seats have to come out of the car. You're either getting the upholstery professionally repaired which is expensive, or you're living with seats that look trashed. These protectors cost a fraction of what seat repair costs and they prevent the damage from happening. If you're using your Prelude to haul anything regularly - bikes, snowboards, home depot runs, moving stuff - these protectors pay for themselves the first time they save your seats from getting destroyed.
What You Get
- Honda OEM seat back protector set (part number 08P30-36W-100)
- Two hard plastic panels (driver and passenger side)
- Two fabric transition pieces
- Pre-installed velcro on panels, plus velcro strips for seat backs
- Protects folded rear seats from scratches, scuffs, and tears
- Creates smooth loading surface from trunk to seat backs
Fits Your Car
- 2026+ Honda Prelude (BF1)
Note: Before you stick the velcro to your seat backs, clean them. Wipe them down with a damp cloth and let them dry. If the seat backs are dirty or dusty, the velcro won't stick and the panels will fall off when you're loading stuff. When you're applying the velcro, press hard for 30 seconds to make sure it bonds to the seat material. After you've stuck the velcro on, wait a few hours before you actually use the protectors. The adhesive needs time to cure. Don't just install the velcro and immediately start loading heavy cargo or you're peeling the velcro right back off. When you're positioning the fabric transition pieces, make sure they're actually filling the gap between the seats and the trunk floor. If they're not positioned right, your cargo's going to catch on the edge instead of sliding smoothly. Test it by running your hand across the transition from trunk to seats. It should feel relatively smooth. If you're hauling really dirty or greasy stuff, throw a tarp or blanket over the protectors. The plastic and fabric clean up fine but it's easier to wash a tarp than scrub grease out of fabric. Don't slam heavy stuff down on the plastic panels. They're durable but they're not bulletproof. Treat them like car interior parts, not like the bed of a pickup truck.
- 2026+ Honda Prelude
-
(2) Seat Back Protectors(2) Fabric Transition Panels























