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. had significantly worse performance in frontal offset crash test according to then-institute head Brian O'Neill compared to other contemporary minivans. One of the tested Trans Sports is displayed at the institute's headquarters. 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.
Moderate overlap frontal test The moderate overlap test (formerly
frontal offset test), introduced in January 1995, differs from that of the U.S. government's
National 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 , not at an angle. The IIHS test exposes 40% of the front of the vehicle to an impact with a deformable barrier at approximately . This offset test represents approximately 0.04% of all car crashes and "is the equivalent of running a vehicle into a parked car at . In December 2022 the IIHS updated the moderate overlap test to include a second
crash 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 15
small SUVs subjected to the new test, nine received an overall rating of poor due to high rear passenger injury measurements to the
head,
neck and
chest.
Small overlap frontal test 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. 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). A
Medical 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. 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. The IIHS has since tested family cars, compact cars, minicars, small and midsized SUVs, minivans, muscle cars and large pickup trucks through the small-overlap test. In 2015, the IIHS began conducting this test on the passenger side of vehicles. == Side impact test ==