MODEL
Honda Accord
NHTSA safety across every Honda Accord model year we cover.
Across the 8 model years of the Honda Accord we cover (2019 to 2026), the strongest crash-test showing is the 2026 at 100 on the NHTSA Safety Index, and the lowest is the 2019 at 88. 27 recalls have been issued across those years.
The Honda Accord is a midsize sedan with a decades-long reputation as a benchmark in its segment. Aimed at drivers who prioritize a balanced, practical, and refined daily driver, the Accord competes in one of the most contested categories in the American market. The 2019 through 2025 model years represent a mature, safety-conscious generation that appeals to commuters, families, and value-focused buyers who refuse to compromise on protection.
At MotorCaliber, we judge a vehicle on its safety record, and the Honda Accord earns serious respect across the 2019 to 2025 generation. The headline number is a 98 out of 100 NHTSA Safety Index for the 2025 model year, landing it firmly in our Exceptional band. Crash-test hardware backs that up: the best-performing model years achieve a perfect five stars across frontal, side, and rollover categories. That is a clean sweep that not every midsize sedan can claim. The picture is not without blemish, however. Across seven model years, the Accord has accumulated 19 recalls, which is a meaningful number for a single nameplate over that span. Shoppers should verify whether any open recalls apply to a specific vehicle using the NHTSA VIN lookup tool before purchase or delivery. Owner complaints total 1,664 across the covered years. Within those unverified allegations, 72 involve reported crashes, 63 involve reported injuries, 7 involve reported fires, and 1 involves a reported death. These figures are owner-submitted and unverified, but they are real signals worth monitoring, particularly for anyone considering an earlier year in this generation. The bottom line is straightforward: the Accord's crash-test performance is among the strongest in its class, and the 2025 model year represents the safest expression of this generation. Recall history warrants a VIN check, but the structural safety credentials here are genuinely impressive.
WHAT REVIEWERS SAYReviewers generally regard the Accord as one of the most well-rounded midsize sedans on sale, praising its driving dynamics, interior quality, and feature content relative to its segment. Safety technology availability tends to draw positive attention. Critics occasionally note that infotainment execution and certain ergonomic choices can be polarizing, but overall sentiment across the current generation is strongly favorable.
- The 2025 Accord achieved a 98 out of 100 NHTSA Safety Index, placing it in the Exceptional band, with five-star ratings in frontal, side, and rollover crash tests in the best-performing model years.
- Nineteen recalls have been issued across the 2019 to 2025 generation. Always run a free NHTSA VIN check before purchasing any used or new Accord to confirm no open recalls remain unaddressed.
- Owner complaints across this generation total 1,664, including 72 alleged crash incidents, 63 alleged injuries, and 7 alleged fires. These are unverified allegations, but the pattern is worth reviewing by model year before committing to a specific vehicle.
- Safety performance improves meaningfully toward the newer end of this generation. Buyers who can stretch to a 2024 or 2025 model year will access the strongest combination of crash-test scores and updated standard safety technology.
Most-recalled year on record: 2019 Honda Accord with 6 recalls.