Skip to main content

Nissan Leaf gets top safety rating from Euro NCAP

Euro NCAP (the European New Car Assessment Programme) has awarded the 100% electric Nissan Leaf the highest five star car safety rating following its performance in the independent organisation's stringent crash tests. It is the first electric vehicle ever to earn this distinction.
May 16, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Euro NCAP (the European New Car Assessment Programme) has awarded the 100% electric 838 Nissan Leaf the highest five star car safety rating following its performance in the independent organisation’s stringent crash tests. It is the first electric vehicle ever to earn this distinction.

The reigning European and World Car of the Year earned an 89 per cent rating for adult safety, an 83 per cent rating for child protection and an 84 per cent rating for its on-board safety assist systems, which include electronic stability control (ESC) and a speed limiter as standard. The compact family hatchback also earned a higher-than-average 65 per cent score for pedestrian safety, thanks in part to the low nose design and the comparative lack of ‘hard points’ under the bonnet.

“The Nissan Leaf proves that EVs can achieve the same safety levels as traditional cars. The standard is now set for the next generation of such cars on the European market,” said Euro NCAP secretary general Michiel van Ratingen.

The vehicle’s safety assessment followed standard Euro NCAP procedure, with tests for frontal impact, side impact, side pole impact and whiplash. The car’s 48 lithium-ion battery modules, which are housed in a special compartment beneath the floor, completely withstood all the impacts.

The EV’s battery system was switched on during the crash simulations to test the in-built safety measures of the electrical system, which includes automatic cut-off isolation in the event of an accident. The car passed those with flying colours, too.
The Euro NCAP result comes less than a month after Nissan Leaf earned a Top Safety Pick rating from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) in the US and is the second five-star rating for Nissan in Europe this year. In February, the compact crossover Nissan Juke also scored top marks.

Related Content

  • POD Point partners with Nissan GB on EV charging
    May 19, 2016
    Electric vehicle charging company POD Point has become an approved supplier of home electric vehicle (EV) charging solutions for Nissan GB, the manufacturer of the Leaf electric car, which has sold over 12,000 in the UK. POD Point’s new status as an approved home charging unit supplier means that anyone purchasing a Nissan plug-in vehicle will be able to easily access a charge point for their home. The POD Point Solo is a reliable home charge unit which can be installed within ten working days. POD Po
  • Nissan uses 180 year-old invention to tackle smartphone distraction behind the wheel
    May 4, 2017
    Nissan GB has adopted a technology that’s almost 200 years old to create a concept solution for reducing the growing problem of smartphone distraction at the wheel. The Nissan Signal Shield is a prototype compartment within the arm rest of a Nissan Juke that is lined with a Faraday cage, an invention dating back to the 1830s, consisting of an enclosure made of a conductive material, such as wire mesh, which blocks electromagnetic fields. Once a mobile device is placed in the compartment and the lid closed,
  • UN vehicle regulations ‘could prevent deaths and injuries in Brazil’
    November 17, 2015
    A new research report from the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) has revealed that 34,000 Brazilian lives could be saved and 350,000 serious injuries prevented by 2030, if UN vehicle safety regulations were adopted and car manufacturers sought to achieve higher ratings in the Latin NCAP crash test programme. Published on the eve of the second High Level Conference on Road Safety in Brazil, the independent study, which was commissioned by Global NCAP, highlights the gap between the regulated vehicl
  • Germany’ plans subsidies to encourage EV use ‘an interesting move’
    April 29, 2016
    Germany has announced plans to motivate German citizens to buy electric and hybrid vehicles, say news reports, with a plan that the transport ministry hopes will boost sluggish electric-vehicle sales. The plan is expected to cost US$1.35 billion (€1.2 billion), with the government and automakers sharing the cost. Car buyers will receive a US$4,530 (€4,000) discount on electric vehicles and a US$3,398 ($3,000) discount on hybrids. The proposal also includes the installation of more charging stations