Automobile Weight and Safety

Gao ID: T-PEMD-91-2 April 11, 1991

GAO discussed the relationship between automobile size and safety. GAO found that: (1) heavier cars were not invariably safer than lighter ones, because the highest fatality rates occurred in cars in the middle of the weight distribution; (2) between 1986 and 1988, single-car accidents accounted for 39 percent of the fatalities, two-vehicle crashes accounted for 51 percent of fatalities, and 10 percent of fatalities occurred in accidents involving 3 or more vehicles; (3) vehicular track width, rather than changes in vehicle weight, was a critical factor affecting rollover accidents; (4) in two-car collisions, the occupants of the lighter car were at greater risk than were the occupants of the heavier vehicle; and (5) if all cars weighed less, the vulnerability of lighter cars in two-car crashes would decline slightly due to the reduced threat to them from heavier cars.



The Justia Government Accountability Office site republishes public reports retrieved from the U.S. GAO These reports should not be considered official, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Justia.