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Insurance Institute for Highway Safety

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
U.S. nonprofit organization
"IIHS" redirects here. For the social history archive, seeInternational Institute of Social History.
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and Highway Loss Data Institute
Interior of the IIHS' Vehicle Research Crash Hall
Formation1959; 66 years ago (1959) (IIHS)
HeadquartersArlington, Virginia, U.S.
President
David Harkey
Websitewww.iihs.org

TheInsurance Institute for Highway Safety and Highway Loss Data Institute (IIHS-HLDI) is an Americannonprofit organization. It was established in 1959, and it is noted for its safety reviews of vehicles in varioussimulatedtraffic situations, including the effectiveness of a vehicle's structural integrity and safety systems during acollision, in addition to examiningimprovement on such elements.[1]

IIHS releases an annual list of the safest vehicles, which includes list of 'Top Safety Picks' as well as a "Top Safety Picks+'.[2]

History

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The IIHS was founded in 1959 by three separateinsurance groups—the Association of Casualty and Surety Companies, the National Association of Automotive Mutual Insurance Companies, and the National Association of Independent Insurers[3]—as a supporting entity to other academic and research organizations involving highway safety.[4] Russell Brown served as the inaugural president of the IIHS until 1968, when its board of governors changed the IIHS to an independent scientific organization. The following year, Physician William Haddon Jr. assumed the position of IIHS president after the change, and the IIHS began conducting crash tests starting with the low-speed bumper test.

In 1972, theHighway Loss Data Institute (HLDI) was founded as a supporting organization to the IIHS, as was the latter's original purpose for other organizations. The HLDI compiles and publishes insurance loss statistics due to incidents such as traffic collisions and consequential damages depending on the vehicle type.[5]

The IIHS and HLDI are interchangeably referred to as one entity (IIHS-HLDI) or separate entities by the organization itself.

Frontal crash tests

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Frontal moderate overlap crash test of a 2019Subaru Ascent
The 2007Ford Edge passed this test with the institute's highest rating, "Good". The tested Edge is displayed at the institute's headquarters as an example of a standout performer in a frontal offset crash.
The 1997Pontiac Trans Sport had significantly worse performance in frontal offset crash test according to then-institute head Brian O'Neill compared to other contemporary minivans.[6] One of the tested Trans Sports is displayed at the institute's headquarters.
The 2017Toyota Tacoma is one of many vehicles that passed the institute's challenging small overlap test.

The IIHS evaluates six individual categories, assigning each a "Good", "Acceptable", "Marginal", or "Poor" rating before determining the vehicle's overall frontal impact rating.[7]

Moderate overlap frontal test

[edit]

The moderate overlap test (formerlyfrontal offset test), introduced in January 1995,[8] differs from that of the U.S. government'sNational Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) in that its tests are offset. The NHTSA standards require vehicles to provide no injuries to occupants after a head-on impact into a fixed barrier at 30 mph (48 km/h), not at an angle.[9] The IIHS test exposes 40% of the front of the vehicle to an impact with a deformable barrier at approximately 40 mph (64 km/h). This offset test represents approximately 0.04% of all car crashes and "is the equivalent of running a vehicle into a parked car at 75 mph (121 km/h).[9]

As with the NHTSA's frontal impact test, vehicles across different weight categories may not be directly compared. This is because the heavier vehicle is generally considered to have an advantage if it encounters a lighter vehicle or is involved in a single-vehicle crash. The IIHS demonstrated this by crashing three midsize sedans with three smaller "Good" rated minicars. The three minicars were rated "Poor" in these special offset head-on car-to-car tests in 2009, while the midsize cars rated "Good" or "Acceptable".[10]

In December 2022 the IIHS updated the moderate overlap test to include a secondcrash test dummy seated behind the driver. The IIHS said that the advanced seat belt protections found in the front passenger seats, including crash tensioners and load limiters, should also exist in the rear passenger seats. Out of 15small SUVs subjected to the new test, nine received an overall rating of poor due to high rear passenger injury measurements to thehead,neck andchest.[11]

Small overlap frontal test

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On August 14, 2012, IIHS released the first results for a new test, called the "small overlap front test." The new test, which is used in addition to the 40% offset test introduced in 1995, subjects only 25% of the front end of the vehicle to a 40 mph impact against a solid, rounded-off barrier. As a result, it is far more demanding on the vehicle structure than the 40% offset test. In the first round of tests, composed of 11 midsized luxury and near-luxury vehicles, most vehicles did poorly; only three vehicles received "good" or "acceptable" ratings.[12]

The rating system is similar to the 40% offset, but has some key differences: hip/thigh and lower leg/foot ratings replace individual ratings for each leg and foot, and a full score cannot be attained without deployment of front and side curtain airbags (due to the severe side movement often resulting from this test).[13]

AMedical College of Wisconsin study found small-overlap collisions result in increased head, chest, spine, hip, and pelvis injuries. This sort of collision is common on two-lane roads with two-way traffic where a center median is absent. Single vehicle crashes (into a tree or a pole) account for 40% of small-overlap crashes.[14] According to the IIHS, 25% of frontal crash deaths are due to small overlap crashes, with the outer front wheel first to receive the impact forces rather than the more central crash absorbing structure.[15]

The IIHS has since tested family cars,[16] compact cars,[17][18] minicars,[19] small[20] and midsized[21][22] SUVs, minivans,[23] muscle cars[24] and large pickup trucks[25] through the small-overlap test.

In 2017, the IIHS began conducting this test on the passenger side of vehicles.

Side impact test

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See also:Side collision

The IIHS introduced the side impact test in 2003. In this test, the test vehicle remains stationary while a four-wheeled sled, with a deformable barrier attached, strikes the side of the vehicle at 31 mph (50 km/h). This test is used to simulate the impact of a high-riding pickup orSUV on the subject vehicle.

In 2019, the IIHS modified the test by using a heavier sled, changing the barrier design, and increasing the impact speed from 31 to 37 mph (60 km/h). The IIHS cited the original test being unrealistic as the main reason for the modification.[26] This modified side test officially began in 2021. Out of 20 small SUVs tested in the new, tougher side impact tests, only one received a Good rating. In May 2022, the IIHS officially completed its test for the tougher, side crash test on 18 midsize SUVs. Ten midsize SUVs earned good ratings, two more with Acceptable ratings, and six with marginal overall ratings.[27][28]

Roof strength test

[edit]
Roof-strength test of a 2016Dodge Challenger

In the United States, rollovers accounted for nearly 25% of passenger vehicle fatalities. Features such aselectronic stability control are proven to significantly reduce rollovers andlane departure warning systems may also help. Rollover sensingside curtain airbags also help to minimize injuries in the event of a rollover.[29]

In the test, which was introduced in 2009, the vehicle rested on a platform while ahydraulic metal plate diagonally pushed on the roof area above the side windows. In order to get the highest rating, the vehicle was to withstand a force equivalent to at least four times itscurb weight before collapsing 5 in (130 mm).[30]

The roof strength test was discontinued in 2022.[31]

50th Anniversary crash test

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In 2009, the IIHS celebrated its 50 year anniversary. To illustrate how much automotive safety has progressed in five decades, IIHS tested a 1959Chevrolet Bel Air crashing head-on, 40% offset with a 2009Chevrolet Malibu at 40 mph.[32] It put the video of the crash on the Internet and "the results were no surprise to anyone with a passing familiarity with cars."[33] The Bel Air's occupant compartment was extensively damaged by the crash. Coupled with the car's lack of modern safety features such asairbags andseat belts, this resulted in the crash test dummy in the Bel Air recording forces that would have probably causedfatal injuries to a real driver. They "would not only hit the inside of the car and experience a large (and damaging acceleration) but the car would smash you on the inside."[34] Sophisticated engineering and high-strength steel give modern vehicles a huge advantage.[32]

Head restraint evaluation

[edit]

This tested the vehicle's driver seat to determine effectiveness of the head restraints.[35] The driver's seat was placed on a sled to mimic rear-end collisions at 20 mph. Rear-end collisions at low to moderate speeds typically do not result in serious injuries but they are common.[36] In 2005, the IIHS estimated 25% of medical costs were related to whiplash injuries.

The head restraint evaluation test was discontinued in 2022.[37]

Frontal collision avoidance evaluation

[edit]

Original vehicle-to-vehicle

[edit]

In this test, an engineer drove the test car toward a rolling, cushioned box, which was used to simulate an actual car. The ratings, "basic", "advanced", and "superior", were awarded depending on whether the front crash prevention system met government criteria, and if the system could reduce the speed or avoid the collision at both 12 and 25 mph (19 and 40 km/h).[38]

The original vehicle-to-vehicle test was discontinued in 2022.[39]

Vehicle-to-vehicle

[edit]

An engineer drives the test car at speeds of 31, 37, and 43 mph (50, 60, and 69 km/h) toward a target (a semitrailer or an impactable car or motorcycle) that is placed at the center (all three targets) or offset to the left or right (car and motorcycle only). Points are awarded based on how soon the vehicle issues a warning for an impending collision (all three targets) and how much the vehicle slows down to avoid or mitigate the collision (car and motorcycle only). For the semitrailer test, the engineer steers the vehicle away from the semitrailer to avoid a potential crash.[40]

Vehicle-to-pedestrian

[edit]

The IIHS runs this test in three different scenarios, each scenario having two different speeds for the tested vehicle.

  • 1st scenario: A 6 ft (180 cm) tall adult pedestrian walks perpendicular to oncoming traffic, and the tested vehicle must successfully autobrake enough to avoid hitting the pedestrian at 12 and 25 mph (19 and 40 km/h).
  • 2nd scenario: A 45 in (110 cm) tall child (average height of a 7-year-old child) darts out from behind two parked vehicles (the one closer to the child is a sedan, and the farther is an SUV), and the tested vehicle must successfully autobrake enough to avoid hitting the child at 12 and 25 mph (19 and 40 km/h).
  • 3rd scenario: A 6 ft (180 cm) tall adult pedestrian walks parallel to traffic, and the tested vehicle must successfully autobrake enough to avoid hitting the pedestrian at 25 and 37 mph (40 and 60 km/h).[41]

Headlight evaluation

[edit]

In March 2016, the IIHS released ratings for headlight performance. Their first test involved family cars, and most earned marginal or poor ratings. Only one vehicle, theToyota Prius V, earned a good rating when equipped with specific headlights.[42] The Institute evaluated headlights for small SUVs 4 months later, and none of the vehicles tested earn a good rating.[43] In October 2016, they released ratings for pickup trucks, and theHonda Ridgeline was the only pickup to earn a good rating on the headlights test when equipped with specific headlights.[44]

Awards

[edit]

TheTop Safety Pick (TSP) is an annual award to the best-performing cars of the year.[45] As of the revisions to the award requirements in February 2023, a vehicle must receive overall marks of "Good" in the moderate overlap front, driver-side small overlap front and passenger-side small overlap front tests, as well as the side test that was updated in 2021. Additionally, theheadlight rating criteria across all trims of a vehicle must either be "Good" or "Acceptable." Ratings for roof strength, head restraints and vehicle-to-vehicle front crash prevention were previously part of the overall TSP evaluation, but were removed in 2023 as nearly all vehicles tested performed well in these categories. TheTop Safety Pick+ award (TSP+) is given to vehicles that meet all the criteria for aTop Safety Pick and perform well in the nighttime vehicle-to-pedestrian front crash test, where some crash prevention systems may struggle due to low light conditions.[46]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"Regulatory documents". Iihs.org. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  2. ^"The 36 safest cars you can buy right now, according to experts".Quartz. 2025-03-20. Retrieved2025-11-20.
  3. ^"Insurance Notes: Insurance Institute Created to Push Highway Safety," Chicago Daily Tribune (January 12, 1959), c5.
  4. ^"Insurance Institute for Highway Safety".The News Wheel. Retrieved2023-01-09.
  5. ^"Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI) | Insurance Glossary Definition | IRMI.com".www.irmi.com. Retrieved2023-01-09.
  6. ^Shelsby, Ted (November 20, 1996)."Astro and GMC Safari do poorly in crash tests Windstar is only van to get good evaluation from Insurance Institute".Baltimore Sun. RetrievedJune 30, 2022.
  7. ^Weberillustrations, Bob."Cars.com". Cars.com. Retrieved2011-11-13.
  8. ^"Frontal crash tests". Iihs.org. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  9. ^abMateja, Jim (November 25, 1996)."Mini-van Crash Tests Follow Air-bag Recipe for Paranoia".Chicago Tribune. RetrievedJune 30, 2022.
  10. ^"New crash tests demonstrate the influence of vehicle size and weight on safety in crashes; results are relevant to fuel economy policies".IIHS.org. April 14, 2009. Archived fromthe original on May 19, 2009. RetrievedJune 30, 2022.
  11. ^Leigh, Heather (13 December 2022)."IIHS changing the way it evaluates vehicle safety to include backseat passengers".abcactionnews.com.WFTS-TV. Retrieved13 December 2022.
  12. ^"IIHS raises the bar with new crash test". Iihs.org. 2012-08-14. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  13. ^"IIHS.org". IIHS.org. 2012-08-14. Archived fromthe original on 2012-08-16. Retrieved2012-08-14.
  14. ^"New car crash test promises to make a big safety impact". News.consumerreports.org. 2012-08-14. Archived fromthe original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  15. ^"Honda, Volvo models get high marks in new overlap crash tests". Autonews.com. 2013-03-07. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  16. ^"Family cars trump luxury models in new crash test". Iihs.org. 2012-12-20. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  17. ^"Small overlap front test challenges small cars". Iihs.org. 2013-08-08. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  18. ^"Small car ratings vary in small overlap test". Iihs.org. 2014-07-30. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  19. ^"Minicars fall short in tough frontal crash test". Iihs.org. 2014-02-20. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  20. ^"Redesigned Subaru Forester aces tough new crash test". Iihs.org. 2013-05-16. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  21. ^"Small overlap test stymies midsize SUVs". Iihs.org. 2014-04-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  22. ^"Midsize SUVs' ratings are mixed". Iihs.org. 2015-05-12. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  23. ^"3 minivans have dire crash test results". Archived fromthe original on 2014-11-23.
  24. ^"Muscle cars fall short of safety awards". Iihs.org. 2016-05-24. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  25. ^"Pickups struggle with small overlap test". Iihs.org. 2016-04-12. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  26. ^Atiyeh, Clifford (2019-11-21)."IIHS Safety Group Toughens Crucial Crash Test, Will Live-Stream One on Nov. 21".Car and Driver. Retrieved2019-12-30.
  27. ^"Small SUVs struggle in new, tougher side test".
  28. ^"Most midsize SUVS perform well in the new side test".
  29. ^"Blogs.consumerreports.org". Blogs.consumerreports.org. 2009-03-24. Archived fromthe original on 2010-05-30. Retrieved2011-11-13.
  30. ^"IIHS debuts new roof strength crash test, small SUVs rated first".Autoblog. Retrieved2019-12-30.
  31. ^"About our tests".IIHS. Retrieved2024-04-03.
  32. ^abJensen, Christopher (September 17, 2009)."A 2009 Chevy Malibu Destroys a 1959 Bel Air -- Literally".The New York Times. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2018.
  33. ^Northrup, Laura (September 23, 2009)."Crash Test Wars: 1959 Chevy Bel Air VS 2009 Chevy Malibu".Consumerist. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2018.
  34. ^Allain, Rhett (December 18, 2010)."Crash Test: 2009 Malibu vs. 1959 Bel Air".Wired. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2018.
  35. ^"IIHS.org". IIHS.org. Archived fromthe original on 2014-05-27. Retrieved2014-05-27.
  36. ^"IIHS.org". IIHS.org. Archived fromthe original on 2011-11-08. Retrieved2011-11-13.
  37. ^"About our tests".IIHS. Retrieved2024-04-03.
  38. ^"Front crash prevention tests". Iihs.org. Archived fromthe original on 2019-05-14. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  39. ^"Original front crash prevention: vehicle-to-vehicle".IIHS. Retrieved2025-08-11.
  40. ^"Front crash prevention: vehicle-to-vehicle".IIHS. Retrieved2025-08-11.
  41. ^"New ratings address pedestrian crashes".
  42. ^"New IIHS ratings show most headlights are lacking". Iihs.org. 2016-03-30. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  43. ^"Most small SUV headlights rate poor". Iihs.org. 2016-07-12. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-08. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  44. ^"Pickups fall short in headlight testing". Iihs.org. 2016-10-25. Archived fromthe original on 2017-09-06. Retrieved2017-10-08.
  45. ^Insurance Institute for Highway Safety releases annual list of safest vehicles. 2025-10-28. Retrieved2025-11-20 – via www.wsaw.com.
  46. ^Vincent, John M. (23 February 2023)."The IIHS Announces 2023 Top Safety Pick Winners".U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved23 February 2023.

External links

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