IIHS strengthens requirements for TOP SAFETY PICK awards
As a result of the tougher criteria, only 48 models qualify for 2023 awards. Of those, 28 earn TOP SAFETY PICK+ and 20 earn TOP SAFETY PICK. This time last year, before changes to the award requirements, there were 101 winners, including 65 earning the higher-tier TOP SAFETY PICK+.
“The number of winners is smaller this year because we’re challenging automakers to build on the safety gains they’ve already achieved,” said IIHS President
The biggest change to the criteria for both awards is the replacement of the original IIHS side crash test with the updated evaluation launched in 2021. The updated test involves 82 percent more energy than the original test. Vehicles must earn an acceptable or good rating to qualify for TOP SAFETY PICK, while a good rating is required for the “plus.”
The TOP SAFETY PICK+ criteria include another new evaluation, the nighttime vehicle-to-pedestrian front crash prevention test. Advanced or superior performance is required in both the nighttime and daytime pedestrian tests for the higher award. For TOP SAFETY PICK, only a daytime rating of advanced or superior is required.
When it comes to headlights, requirements for the base award have gotten more stringent. Previously, a vehicle could qualify by offering at least one trim level with available acceptable or good headlights, while winners of the “plus” award needed to have them standard across all trims. For 2023, both awards require standard acceptable or good headlights.
As before, to earn either award, a vehicle must earn good ratings in the driver-side small overlap front, passenger-side small overlap front and original moderate overlap front tests.
The roof strength, head restraint and vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention evaluations are no longer part of the award criteria.
Toyota Motor Corp., which includes the Toyota and Lexus brands, has the most 2023 awards overall and the most awards in each category — nine TOP SAFETY PICK+ and six TOP SAFETY PICK awards for a total of 15. Honda Motor Co., which includes the Acura and Honda brands, is next with six TOP SAFETY PICK+ and two TOP SAFETY PICK awards. Mazda earns six TOP SAFETY PICK awards.
By class, midsize luxury SUVs earn the most TOP SAFETY PICK+ awards, with nine, and small SUVs earn the most awards in total, with four TOP SAFETY PICK+ and eight TOP SAFETY PICK awards. However, vehicles of almost every size and class make the cut, including plug-in hybrids and all-electric vehicles.
“It’s exciting that these manufacturers have been so swift to implement the substantial design changes and technological advancements that these new requirements demand,” said Harkey. “We’re confident that the number of winners will continue to grow throughout the year.”
Updates to the award requirements are an essential part of the TOP SAFETY PICK program, which is designed to continually push manufacturers toward a higher level of safety. The updated side test is an example of how IIHS builds on past successes to encourage further progress.
When IIHS introduced the original side test in 2003, most of the vehicles tested earned a poor rating. By 2021, when the Institute launched the updated version that is now part of the award program, virtually every vehicle built for the U.S. market earned a good rating in the original test.
Manufacturers deserve congratulations for that progress, which has saved many lives. In the real world, a driver of a vehicle rated good in the original test is 70 percent less likely to die in a left-side crash, compared with a driver of a vehicle rated poor.
The updated test was born when IIHS researchers discovered that fatalities were still common in side crashes that occurred at higher speeds than the original evaluation. In addition to a higher speed, the updated test uses a new striking barrier that is closer to the weight of today’s SUVs than the old barrier and more closely mimics the damage they create.
Similar progress lies behind the stricter requirements for headlights and pedestrian front crash prevention systems.
Vehicles with good- and acceptable-rated headlights have 15-19 percent fewer nighttime single-vehicle crashes than vehicles with poor-rated headlights, and the TOP SAFETY PICK program has already pushed many inferior alternatives off the market. Since IIHS introduced the daytime vehicle-to-pedestrian front crash prevention evaluation in 2019, pedestrian crash avoidance has become at least an option on nearly every model, and around half the systems tested earn superior ratings. But there is still more to do.
About half of all fatal
“U.S. traffic fatalities hit a 20-year high in the first half of 2022, in part due to a steady climb in pedestrian crashes,” Harkey said. “Safer vehicles can be an important part of the solution, even though reversing the trend will also take a concerted effort from policymakers and other stakeholders.”
The sunsetting of the roof strength, head restraint and vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention tests is also a result of industry progress, which has made these tests less relevant in their current form.
The federal government adopted roof strength standards similar to the IIHS requirements in 2009, and for some time now, virtually all vehicles tested have earned good ratings. Electronic stability control, which has been mandatory since 2012, has also dramatically reduced the rollover crashes that stronger roofs are intended to mitigate.
Almost all new vehicles earn good ratings in the head restraint evaluation too. IIHS researchers are exploring how that test might be updated to help eliminate more injuries from rear-impact crashes. Similarly, the vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention test has been suspended because virtually all new vehicles meet the current requirements as the result of a voluntary commitment by automakers that IIHS helped broker. Researchers are currently working on a more challenging test to address crashes that occur at higher speeds and involve vehicles other than passenger vehicles.
Further changes to the award criteria are coming in 2024. A good, rather than good or acceptable, rating in the updated side evaluation will be required for TOP SAFETY PICK as well as the higher-tier award. In addition, a good or acceptable rating in the updated moderate overlap front test launched last year will be required for the higher-tier TOP SAFETY PICK+ award, while a good rating in the original moderate overlap front test will continue to qualify vehicles for TOP SAFETY PICK. The updated test, which incorporates an additional dummy positioned in the second row, is designed to encourage automakers to extend the high level of protection now commonly provided for the driver and front seat passenger to rear seat occupants.
See below for the full list of winners. For details on each vehicle, go to iihs.org/ratings.
VNR:
Thurs. 2/23/2023,
SD transponder 14/slot 4 (dl11983V) bandwidth 6 MHz; symbol rate 3.9787
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For more information, go to iihs.org
The
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2023 TOP SAFETY PICK+ winners earn good ratings in the driver-side small overlap front, passenger-side small overlap front, original moderate overlap front, and updated side crash tests. They also have standard good- or acceptable-rated headlights and earn advanced or superior ratings in both daytime and nighttime vehicle-to-pedestrian front crash prevention tests.
Small cars
Acura Integra
Midsize cars
Subaru Outback
Toyota Camry (built after
Large luxury cars
Genesis G90
Small SUVs
Honda CR-V
Honda HR-V
Lexus UX
Subaru Solterra (built after
Midsize SUVs
Hyundai Palisade
Kia Telluride
Nissan Pathfinder
Subaru Ascent
Toyota Highlander
Volkswagen ID.4
Midsize luxury SUVs
Acura MDX
Acura RDX
Infiniti QX60
Lexus NX
Lexus NX Plug-in Hybrid
Lexus RX
Tesla Model Y
Volvo XC90
Volvo XC90 Recharge
Minivans
Honda Odyssey
Toyota Sienna
Large pickups
Rivian R1T crew cab
Toyota Tundra crew cab
Toyota Tundra extended cab
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2023 TOP SAFETY PICK winners earn good ratings in the driver-side small overlap front, passenger-side small overlap front, and original moderate overlap front crash tests, and a good or acceptable rating in the updated side crash test. They also have standard good- or acceptable-rated headlights and earn an advanced or superior rating in daytime vehicle-to-pedestrian front crash prevention tests.
Small cars
Honda Civic hatchback (except Type R performance variant)
Honda Civic sedan
Mazda 3 hatchback
Mazda 3 sedan
Toyota Corolla hatchback
Toyota Corolla sedan
Midsize Cars
Hyundai Sonata (built after
Subaru Legacy
Midsize luxury cars
Lexus ES 350
Small SUVs
Mazda CX-30
Mazda CX-5
Mazda CX-50
Nissan Rogue
Subaru Forester
Toyota RAV4
Toyota RAV4 Prime
Toyota Venza
Midsize SUVs
Ford Explorer
Mazda CX-9
Midsize luxury SUVs
Lincoln Nautilus
Attachments
Joe Young Insurance Institute for Highway Safety 504-641-0491 [email protected]
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