There are two factors to evaluate when considering safety: passive safety (airbags, seatbelts, crush zones, and other hardware to protect you) and active safety (handling, braking, grip, and acceleration capabilities that may help you avoid an accident). We examine both types, believing firmly they’re required to make a vehicle as safe as it can be.
Since most of our 12 SUV of the Year nominees are new designs from the ground up, most have the latest safety equipment, such as traction control, yaw sensors, second-generation dual-Stage airbags and child safety seat tetfers. SUVs with three-abreast rear seating include a center seat position shoulder harness, usually mounted in the ceiling.
Front-seat side airbags are optional on the Escape, Tribute, and Explorer Sport, and are standard on the MDX, QX4, and Montero.…
