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The Mazda CX-5 Is the Safest Compact SUV You’re Not Buying

☕ 3 min read
Red Mazda CX-5 on an empty highway at dusk

Mazda sells roughly 3% of the cars in America. Tiny. A rounding error next to Toyota or GM. So you’d be forgiven for never looking twice at the CX-5 in a dealership lot full of RAV4s and CR-Vs. But a decade of FARS fatality data suggests you should have been looking a lot harder, because the CX-5 posts a 0.12 fatality rate per 100 million vehicle miles traveled — the lowest of any compact SUV with over a million vehicles on American roads.[1]

0.12
Deaths per 100M VMT — lowest among compact SUVs with 1M+ fleet size

That number needs context. The Toyota RAV4, America’s best-selling compact SUV, sits at 0.19 — 58% higher. The Nissan Rogue manages 0.35. The Chevy Equinox lands at 0.36 — three times the CX-5’s rate. The Honda CR-V, a vehicle that exists in every third suburban driveway, posts 0.53. And the Ford Escape? A staggering 0.95 — nearly eight times deadlier per mile driven.[1][2]

You’d assume CX-5 drivers are just more careful. More sober. Wealthier, more experienced. FARS toxicology says otherwise: 19.8% of CX-5 drivers in fatal crashes tested positive for alcohol or drugs — a higher impairment rate than the RAV4 (18.4%), the CR-V (17.6%), or the Honda HR-V (17.0%).[1] CX-5 occupants are, if anything, slightly more chemically adventurous than the competition. The vehicle itself is what’s keeping them alive.

When a CX-5 does appear in FARS — which captures only fatal crashes — it shows a 43.2% lethality rate, meaning deaths divided by total FARS-recorded crashes. That’s the lowest in the compact SUV class. The Equinox sits at 55.8%. The Escape at 55.7%. Even the RAV4 manages 49.8%. In the cruelest milliseconds of a collision, the CX-5 is structurally better at turning a fatal-level crash into a survivable one.[1]

The engineering story is 1,800 MPa ultra-high-tensile steel. Mazda was the first automaker to use this grade in a production body structure — the SKYACTIV-Body architecture that debuted with the second-generation CX-5 in 2017. Where most manufacturers were using 980-1,180 MPa steel in critical crush zones, Mazda went 50% harder.[3] The IIHS has awarded the CX-5 Top Safety Pick+ in every model year it’s been eligible, including the updated moderate overlap test in 2024.[4]

This isn’t a one-model anomaly. The CX-30 matches the CX-5 at 0.12. The CX-9 posts 0.17. All three Mazda SUVs sit below the best-case rate of any non-Mazda competitor in the data. Mazda’s sedans tell a different story — the Mazda3 at 1.63 and the Mazda6 at 1.17 are unremarkable — which makes the SUV platform performance even more striking. Same badge, same engineering philosophy, radically different outcomes by body style.[1]

The obvious objection: fleet age. The CX-5 has existed since 2012. The CR-V since 1997, the Escape since 2001. Older vehicles without modern airbags, ESC, or 1,800 MPa steel drag those aggregate rates up. Fair point. But the RAV4 fleet is overwhelmingly gen 4 and gen 5 (2013+) and still posts a rate 58% higher. The Equinox is mostly 2010 and newer, yet runs 3x the CX-5’s rate. Fleet age narrows the gap. It doesn’t close it.[1][5]

Caveats worth stating plainly: FARS only captures fatal crashes, not the ~6.7 million total annual US crashes — the CX-5 could theoretically have poor injury outcomes in lesser collisions and we’d never see it here. Fleet and VMT estimates carry ±15% uncertainty. And 162 FARS deaths is a smaller sample than the CR-V’s 2,072 or the RAV4’s 914, which means more statistical noise. But when the gap is 3x to 8x, noise alone doesn’t get you there.[1][2]

Mazda sells 3% of American cars and builds what might be the safest compact SUV money can buy. The structural engineering says 1,800 megapascals. The data says 0.12. The sales charts say nobody cares.

Sources & References

  1. NHTSA, Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), 2014–2023. nhtsa.gov
  2. National Household Travel Survey (NHTS) — vehicle miles traveled estimates used for rate calculations. nhts.ornl.gov
  3. IIHS, Vehicle Ratings: 2024 Mazda CX-5 — Top Safety Pick+ award, Good ratings across all crashworthiness tests. iihs.org
  4. IIHS, Vehicle Size and Weight — relationship between structural design, curb weight, and occupant fatality risk. iihs.org
  5. NHTSA, FARS Query System — custom queries for vehicle-level fatality and impairment data by make, model, and model year. cdan.dot.gov

Source: NHTSA FARS 2014–2023. Fatality rates use estimated VMT from fleet size × average annual miles; actual mileage may vary ±15%. FARS captures only fatal crashes; non-fatal crash and injury outcomes are not reflected. See methodology for caveats.