Safest type of car for my teenagers to drive?
I need a car my teenagers will be driving that’s the safest and most affordable on the market. I did a search on Reddit for the safest car and it says the Volvo XC90. Is this still the safest car? Safety and safety features are overall more important to me than price, and I’ll definitely buy used.
Safe and easy to drive car, upgrading family vehicle for a new driver?
20k for safest car for teen for 20 highway miles per day
In all honesty, 20 ‘highway’ miles is a short drive. Keep at the speed limit, stay in the outer lanes and they’ll be fine. Just learn to be observant and vigilant. Car doesn’t matter. You can drive a tank of a Hummer and still be indirectly involved somehow.
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Hello r/insurance! I am starting the process of looking for a used car for my teenagers to share. Like many parents with new drivers in the house, I am absolutely terrified about them getting into an accident and getting hurt, killed, or causing it to happen to someone else. They are both doing fine with their lessons and improving every day, but every teenager is inexperienced, even the smartest teenager can be an impulsive moron every now and then, and hey, parents tend to worry. A friend of mine and I have been arguing back and forth about the safest type of vehicle for them to drive. He insists that since head-on collisions are the deadliest type of crashes, that driving a big vehicle with a high center of gravity is the best choice (full size pickup or SUV). I think he's overlooking the fact that high centers of gravity are more prone to rollover, and although rollovers are less deadly than head-ons, they happen with more frequency and can be very catastrophic (or so the internet tells me).
Internet research hasn't yielded a ton of useful information (top results are mostly personal injury attorneys). Crash test ratings don't show the whole picture because they rate cars by type/size, and never compare the categories against each other. I'd rather not cough up for something big if I can be reasonably certain that my kids are safe in something smaller. And I know that the type of driving a person does on a regular basis plays into this quite a bit, so let's assume that they'll be mostly on city streets and freeways, with the occasional trip down 2-lane country highways and farm-to-market roads.
For those of you who are exposed to all the data, what would you put your kids in to keep them safe?