Few small SUVs excel in new front crash prevention tests conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The updated vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention test is tougher, as it addresses crashes that occur at higher speeds and those in which the struck vehicle is a motorcycle or large truck.
Only one of the first 10 small SUVs evaluated in the new test earns a good rating. Two earn acceptable ratings, three marginal and four poor.
“This is a vital update to one of our most successful test programs,” IIHS President David Harkey said. “The vast majority of new vehicles now come with automatic emergency braking, and our research shows the technology prevents as many as half of all front-to-rear crashes. This new, tougher evaluation targets some of the most dangerous front-to-rear crashes that are still happening.”
The Subaru Forester is the only small SUV to earn a good rating in the updated test. Two others, the Honda CR-V and Toyota RAV4, are rated acceptable. The Ford Escape, Hyundai Tucson and Jeep Compass earn marginal ratings, while the Chevrolet Equinox, Mazda CX-5, Mitsubishi Outlander and Volkswagen Taos are all rated poor.
The IIHS says its original vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention evaluation was developed when the technology was relatively new, so the performance requirements only addressed low-speed crashes. By the time the original evaluation, with test runs at 12 and 25 mph, was discontinued at the end of 2022, all tested vehicles were earning the top rating of superior.
Researchers says while real-world data indicates that front crash prevention does eliminate higher-speed crashes, the original test didn’t provide a way to gauge the performance of specific systems at those higher speeds.
IIHS says its additional research also shows that today’s systems are less effective at preventing crashes with motorcycles and medium or heavy trucks than they are at preventing crashes with other passenger vehicles.
To see the full IIHS report, click here.
Photo: IIHS.