HIGHWAY SAFETY RESEARCH & COMMUNICATIONS
TSP 2012 award

Top Safety Picks 2012

To determine crashworthiness — how well a vehicle protects its occupants in a crash — the Institute rates vehicles good, acceptable, marginal, or poor based on performance in high-speed front and side crash tests, a rollover test, plus evaluations of seat/head restraints for protection against neck injuries in rear impacts. To earn Top Safety Pick for 2012 a vehicle must have good ratings in all four Institute tests. See past winners

 


frontal test icon

40 mph frontal offset crash tests are good assessments of vehicles' structural designs.

   
side test icon

Side crash tests are good assessments of occupant protection when vehicles are struck in the side by SUVs or pickups.

   
roof crush test icon

Rollover ratings assess vehicle roof strength for protection in rollover crashes.

   
rear test icon

Rear crash protection/head restraint ratings focus on how well seat/head restraint combinations protect against whiplash injury.

  • Ratings procedures
  • Rear crash protection ratings by make: 
   
ESC icon

Electronic stability control (ESC) significantly reduces crash risk, especially the risk of fatal single-vehicle crashes, by helping drivers maintain control of their vehicles during emergency maneuvers.

   
bumper test icon

Bumper evaluations — The Institute's series of 4 tests (front and rear full-width impacts at 6 mph and front and rear corner impacts at 3 mph) produce the kinds and amounts of damage that commonly occur in low-speed collisions.

List of all vehicle series

©1996-2012, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Highway Loss Data Institute
1005 N. Glebe Road, Suite 800, Arlington, VA 22201 USA | tel 703/247-1500 | fax 703/247-1588