Toyota develops its vehicles and technology under the umbrella of an ‘Integrated Safety Management Concept’, one part of a three-pronged approach which involves continual improvement in vehicle safety as well as initiatives to improve driver and pedestrian awareness and to create a safe traffic environment.
Toyota’s eventual aim is to realise a society where traffic accidents are a thing of the past, which is why decades of research into safety technologies have resulted in Toyota cars receiving consistently high results in Euro NCAP crash safety tests, with the Prius, Yaris, Auris, Verso, Avensis and RAV4 achieving the maximum five-star award.
Toyota’s THUMS computer-modelling system has greatly helped the progress made in occupant and pedestrian safety. In this post, we take a look at some of the passive safety technologies that protect occupants in the event of a collision:
Impact-Absorbing Body and High-Strength Cabin
Seatbelts with Pretensioners and Force Limiters
Whiplash Injury Lessening (WIL) concept seats
Active Headrests
SRS Airbags
ISOFIX child seat mounting points
Impact-Absorbing Body and High-Strength Cabin
The safety of occupants in a collision begins with the construction of the vehicle itself. Since 1968, Toyota has designed and built its vehicles to have impact-absorbing body structures that will crush in the event of an accident, soaking up as much energy from the collision as possible.
In 1987, Toyota further improved occupant safety with the introduction of a high-strength safety cabin that dissipates energy throughout the entire body and minimises damage to the passenger compartment.
Seatbelts with Pretensioners and Force Limiters
Toyota introduced the three-point seatbelt in 1967, and the humble but vital restraint device has been saving lives ever since with little significant change to its design.
Seatbelts are immensely strong – capable of withstanding a weight of two tons – and are designed to control the movement of occupants within the cabin, particularly by limiting any impact to the chest during an accident. Yet they are also comfortable to wear in everyday driving, essential in encouraging occupants to use them on every trip.
In 1991, Toyota added pretensioners to seatbelts, a mechanism that instantaneously retracts the seatbelts when a strong frontal impact is sensed. This, in effect, quickly clinches the seatbelt to remove any slack in the belt and tightly grip the occupant before the full force of the impact is felt by the body.
Force limiters were introduced in 1997 and work in harmony with the pretensioners to protect the occupant while minimising the impact of the seatbelt itself to the occupant’s chest. Force limiters maintain an adequate amount of tension on the seatbelt to restrain the occupant without the force of the restraint causing injury.
Seatbelts with pretensioners and force limiters are fitted to all Toyota passenger vehicles in the current range.
Whiplash Injury Lessening (WIL) concept seats
Just over half of injuries sustained in accidents in Japan were as the result of rear-end collisions, but approximately 90% of those injuries were neck injuries. That’s why Toyota developed the Whiplash Injury Lessening (WIL) concept seat, which first debuted in 1997 and was updated further in 2005.
The WIL concept seats are designed to cushion and support the occupant’s head and chest simultaneously, minimising the injury occurring from the head and torso moving in different directions. Toyota used its THUMS virtual-human computer modelling to confirm the effectiveness of the WIL concept seats in reducing whiplash injuries in lower speed rear impacts.
WIL seats are fitted as standard to most Toyota models, including Yaris, Auris, Prius, RAV4 and Land Cruiser.
Active Headrests
Active Headrests, introduced in 2007, are an extension to the WIL concept seats that further minimise neck injuries in rear-end impacts. A sensor in the seat is triggered by the lower back pressing into the seatback and activates the active headrest, which moves diagonally upwards and forward to catch the back of the head.
This technology decreases the severity of whiplash injury by a further 10-20% compared with the WIL concept seat on its own.
Active Headrests are featured on selected models in the Prius family, as well as Verso, GT86 and Land Cruiser.
SRS Airbags
The first SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) airbag was fitted to a Toyota in 1989, providing protection solely for the driver. Since then, Toyota’s SRS airbag systems have been expanded throughout the passenger cabin to the extent that some Toyota models have nine or more airbags that create a protective cocoon around their occupants.
SRS airbags are triggered in the event of serious collisions, inflating rapidly to produce cushion the occupant and reduce the risk of severe or fatal injury. Dependent on the model, SRS airbags include front airbags for head and chest protection, knee airbags, side airbags, curtain shield airbags, seat cushion airbags and even the revolutionary rear window curtain shield airbag specially developed for the tiny Toyota iQ.
ISOFIX child seat mounting points
ISOFIX is an internationally recognised standard that sets out the specification for secure anchoring of child safety seats in cars, consisting of two anchor points at the base of the rear seats and a top tether point. ISOFIX greatly reduces the risk of improperly fitted child seats, thereby increasing the safety and effectiveness of the child seat.
Occupant safety is a priority for Toyota, so all Toyota passenger vehicles are equipped with ISOFIX child seat mounting points.
To learn more about other Toyota safety technologies, see these related posts:
Braking technologies
Stability and control technologies
Monitoring systems
Safety through convenience
Hi Becky,
Thanks for getting in touch. The vehicles both have ISOFIX points. Unfortunately, this car seat has not been tested with our vehicles, therefore we are unable to tell you if it is compatible with the cars.
Hope this helps.
Does the 2001 yaris verso have isofix? I was looking at one today and could not see any.
Hi Solomon,
Thanks for getting in touch. We can confirm that the 2001 Yaris Verso doesn’t have ISOFIX.
We hope this helps.
Hello Toyota,
Can you please confirm if an Toyota RAV4 from 2003 as an ISOFIX?
Thanks and Regards,
Carlos
Hi Carlos,
Thanks for getting in touch. ISOFIX is standard for all RAV4 models as of 2004, so we would advise that a 2003 RAV4 would not be fitted with ISOFIX.
Thanks.
Hello,
I recently bought a 2009 Toyota Aygo for my daughter, it says in the manual that it has isofix anchor points in the rear seats, but when we tried to put the child seat in, it wouldn’t fit. there are anchor points in the seats, but for some reason we can’t get the child seat to fit. My question is are the isofix anchors not the international fixtures, as I thought all isofix points are all the same.
Cheers Dave
Hi Dave,
Thanks for getting in touch. So we can look into this further for you, could you please provide us with the Registration number/VIN for the vehicle.
Thanks.
Hello,
Thank you for the reply.
The registration number is
PJ09 AZB
Many Thanks
Dave
Hi David,
Thank you for providing the registration number and for your patience. We have spoken with the technical team who have advised that ISOFIX is a universal system for fitting child seats. We would therefore strongly recommend confirming the compatibility with the manufacturer of the child seat or the retailer the seat was purchased from.
Thanks.
Hello,
Thank you for looking into my problem, it looks like it’s the manufacturer of the child seat, what I can’t understand is that it’s a well known make.
Again, thank you for looking into my problem.
Many thanks
Dave
Does the 1998 toyota aristo have isofix and if not could toyota fit it for us?
Hi Sophie,
Thanks for getting in touch. Unfortunately as this is not a UK vehicle, this is not something we can assist you with. We would advise for you to contact Toyota in Japan regarding this, as is it a Japanese vehicle. This may be a useful link for you:
https://twitter.com/toyotamotorcorp?lang=en.
Thanks.
Hello, please can you confirm if my Yaris has Isofix? The reg is Y3 JPM. Thank you.
Hi Victoria,
Thanks for getting in touch. If you could please provide a VIN number, we will be able to assist you further.
Thanks.
Hello,
I recently bought a toyota aygo 2011, could you tell me please if it has isofix? JTDKG12C60N525892.
Thank you
Hi San,
Thanks for getting in touch. Unfortunately we are unable to help as this is not a UK vehicle and so our systems do not recognise it. We would advise for you to contact Toyota in your region, as they will be able to assist you further.
Thanks.
Hello, I have a 2010 Toyota Yaris and a Joie juva car seat. I can’t seem to find a car seat iso fix base that fits… any suggestions?
Hi Jake,
Thanks for getting in touch. Could you please provide us with your registration number/VIN and we can look into this further?
Thanks.
Hey, is it possible to buy a isofix kit and convert a Avensis 2002 without isofix to one with?
Hi Jonah,
Thanks for getting in touch. We would not advise this kind of modification to any vehicle.
Thanks.