Car Rating Lifecycle

Information on this website is based on two separate safety ratings - the Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) ratings and the Used Car Safety Ratings (UCSR).

ANCAP crash tests new vehicles in a laboratory under specific conditions. In contrast, UCSR are based on the analysis of real world car crashes and more reliably reflect the car's actual safety performance. In some instances both a UCSR and ANCAP rating will be available for some car models. Occasionally the ratings from these two different assessments can differ for particular cars. Since the UCSR reflects the relative safety performance of a car in a wider range of crash scenarios and involving a wider range of occupant types than reflected in the ANCAP tests, the UCSR should be the preferred source of information on relative car safety. 

The used car crash research and new car assessment program serve as a guide to the crash protection offered by different cars. They tell you how well your car will protect you in a crash and let you compare research and review car safety ratings for your next new or used car purchase.

While the ANCAP and UCSR systems are not comparable, whichever rating you use, the more stars the better!

To better explain the differences in rating systems, below is the safety rating pathway that cars move through in their lifecycle:

New car is manufactured
“ANCAP Rating” Cars are selected for crash test analysis based on their anticipated popularity with consumers or as indicated by sales volume. ANCAP buys the best selling Australasian new cars* to test in a controlled environment in order to provide consumers with an independent safety star rating and technical report. An ANCAP rating continues to apply until a Used Car Safety Rating (UCSR) has been calculated or the model is substantially changed. Not Yet Rated - Cars are not selected for crash test
On the road - All cars are on the road and may be involved in a crash.
Used Car Safety Ratings (UCSRs) are calculated by analysing data from over 3 million cars involved in real world crashes across Australia and New Zealand. There needs to be a large volume of a particular car on the road, for at least two years, and a significant number of crashes involving that car, in order to calculate a UCSR. UCSR provide a more realistic representation of how a car will perform in a crash. Once a UCSR is calculated the ANCAP result is superseded. Not rated. Not enough crashes to provide a rating.

*ANCAP also rates cars based on crash test data from EuroNCAP tested vehicles that are relevant to Australasia. EuroNCAP chooses the best selling cars in Europe to be tested.

Recently Viewed Cars
 

Recent News


Driving a 5 Star Car... Oh What a Feeling!

The Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) today released 5 star crash test ratings for the Subaru Impreza, the Subaru XV and the Toyota Camry.

ANCAP Chair, Mr Lauchlan McIntosh, said anyone looking to purchase a Subaru or Toyota can do so with the confidence that there is a model with a 5 star ANCAP safety rating.

read more >


camry crash image 2012

Choose a car that could save your life.

If it doesn’t have Electronic Stability Control (ESC) and Curtain Airbags cross it off your list.

read more >


sample car
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