Advertisement

Death-proof cars? Study finds nine models with zero driver fatalities

Honda Odyssey crash test

More than 30,000 people a year still die on American roads, and while that toll has been steadily declining for a decade, it still represents a massive, unending tragedy. Around the world, those figures are climbing, as more people spend more time behind the wheel. Nothing drives advocates of tech such as driverless cars like the potential for sharply reducing the cost in human lives of driving.

Today came a piece of good news in that fight: We are closer than we thought to cars that could prevent all their drivers from dying in a wreck. The bad news? There's still decades of work ahead.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the research arm of the nation's auto insurance companies, studied driver deaths between 2009 and 2012 for mass-market vehicles. (It did not examine passenger deaths due to unreliable data.) Overall, it found that new models with newer technology, especially stability control, had cut the overall death rate in vehicles by a third in the three years since it had last run the numbers. Had vehicle tech been frozen at 1985 levels, the IIHS estimates by 2012 an additional 7,700 people would have died in crashes.

Vehicle

Deaths per million registered vehicle years

Multi-vehicle crashes

Single-vehicle crashes

Rollovers

Audi A4 4WD

0

0

0

0

Honda Odyssey

0

0

0

0

Kia Sorento 2WD

0

0

0

0

Lexus RX 350 4WD

0

0

0

0

Mercedes-Benz GL-Class 4WD

0

0

0

0

Subaru Legacy 4WD

0

0

0

0

Toyota Highlander hybrid 4WD

0

0

0

0

Toyota Sequoia 4WD

0

0

0

0

Volvo XC90 4WD

0

0

0

0

Honda Pilot 4WD

2

0

2

0

Mercedes-Benz M-Class 4WD

3

3

0

0

Ford Crown Victoria

4

4

0

0

GMC Yukon 4WD

4

0

4

0

Acura TL 2WD

5

5

0

0

Chevrolet Equinox 2WD

5

3

2

0

Chevrolet Equinox 4WD

5

5

0

0

Ford Expedition 4WD

5

5

0

0

Ford Flex 2WD

5

0

5

0

Mazda CX-9 4WD

5

0

5

5