Vehicles with Most TSBs

Vehicles with the most Technical Service Bulletins issued by manufacturers.

Understanding Vehicle Safety Rankings

Our vehicle safety rankings are derived from official NHTSA (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) data, including consumer-submitted complaints, manufacturer-issued safety recalls, crash test safety ratings, and calculated reliability scores. Each vehicle is ranked based on a weighted analysis of these factors, giving consumers a data-driven way to evaluate which vehicles have the strongest or weakest safety track records. Rankings are updated as new data becomes available from NHTSA.

How Rankings Are Calculated

The ranking methodology considers multiple dimensions of vehicle safety. Complaint counts reflect the volume of owner-reported issues filed with NHTSA, covering everything from minor inconveniences to serious safety defects. Recall counts indicate how many times a manufacturer has issued an official safety recall for a given vehicle. The safety rating is NHTSA's 5-star crash test score, and the reliability score is a composite metric (0-100) based on complaint frequency, severity of reported issues, and whether complaints involve crashes, fires, injuries, or fatalities. A vehicle with a high complaint count but no safety-critical reports will score differently than one with fewer complaints that involve fires or crashes.

What Consumers Should Look For

When reviewing these rankings, keep in mind that higher-volume vehicles (popular sellers like the Toyota Camry or Ford F-150) naturally accumulate more complaints simply because more of them are on the road. Context matters: compare vehicles within the same class and price range for the most meaningful insights. Look at both the complaint count and the reliability score together. A vehicle with many complaints but a decent reliability score may have common but non-critical issues, while a vehicle with fewer complaints but a low reliability score may have rarer but more dangerous defects. Always review the individual vehicle safety report for detailed component-level breakdowns before making a purchase decision.

#VehicleComplaintsRecallsRatingReliability
1 2025 Mazda Mx-5 1 1 95/100
2 2026 Audi A6 Allroad 1 1 92/100
3 2025 Audi A3 2 0 92/100
4 2025 Audi A5 2 2 92/100
5 2026 Audi A6 1 0 92/100
6 2026 Audi S E-Tron Gt 1 0 92/100
7 2025 Audi Rs 3 1 0 92/100
8 2025 Bmw 430i 2 1 92/100
9 2025 Audi Sq5 1 0 92/100
10 2025 Bmw X2 0 2 92/100
11 2025 Chevrolet Corvette 9 2 92/100
12 2026 Jeep Cherokee 0 1 92/100
13 2026 Land Rover Range Rover Velar 1 0 92/100
14 2026 Mazda Cx-5 1 0 92/100
15 2026 Porsche Cayenne 0 1 92/100
16 2026 Porsche Panamera 1 2 92/100
17 2026 Toyota Prius 3 1 92/100
18 2025 Audi Sq7 1 2 87/100
19 2025 Bmw Ix 10 1 87/100
20 2025 Bmw X6 1 3 87/100
21 2026 Buick Envista 1 0 87/100
22 2025 Bmw Xm 2 0 87/100
23 2025 Buick Envista 23 0 87/100
24 2026 Cadillac Escalade Iql 1 1 87/100
25 2026 Cadillac Xt5 0 0 ★★★★★ 87/100
26 2026 Chevrolet Trax 4 0 87/100
27 2025 Dodge Hornet 0 2 87/100
28 2025 Ford Mustang 8 4 87/100
29 2025 Gmc Hummer Ev Suv 5 0 87/100
30 2025 Jeep Grand Wagoneer 2 1 87/100
31 2025 Jeep Wagoneer S 31 5 87/100
32 2025 Kia Carnival 96 0 87/100
33 2026 Mazda Cx-50 0 0 ★★★★★ 87/100
34 2025 Mini Cooper 1 3 87/100
35 2025 Ram 5500 2 3 87/100
36 2026 Ram 3500 13 3 87/100
37 2026 Subaru Crosstrek 2 0 87/100
38 2025 Ram 3500 22 4 87/100
39 2026 Subaru Outback 1 0 87/100
40 2025 Toyota 4runner 39 1 87/100
41 2026 Toyota 4runner 3 0 87/100
42 2026 Toyota Crown 1 1 87/100
43 2026 Toyota Corolla 4 1 87/100
44 2025 Toyota Prius 11 0 87/100
45 2026 Toyota Tacoma 1 0 87/100
46 2025 Volvo Ex40 1 3 87/100
47 2025 Volvo Ex90 45 3 87/100
48 2025 Volvo Ex30 3 3 87/100
49 2026 Volvo Vnl (4) 3 6 87/100
50 2025 Audi A6 Allroad 0 1 ★★★★★ 85/100