Watch How Euro NCAP Crashes Hydrogen Toyota Mirai
The hydrogen tanks must be shielded like human occupants in this one.
The second-generation of the hydrogen fuel cell Toyota Mirai has received the maximum five-star rating in the Euro NCAP safety tests.
It's not the first hydrogen vehicle tested in Europe, as in 2018 Euro NCAP performed its first-ever crash tests of an FCV - the Hyundai NEXO. At the time, it also was rated at five-stars, but results are not comparable, as the difficulty increases basically each year.
The Toyota Mirai did pretty well and there was no explosion or anything related to damaged hydrogen installation.
"With a high-pressure tank storing the hydrogen, safety is of paramount importance and the latest generation Mirai ensures this with a top five-star rating. Understanding that some consumers may be apprehensive about the technology, Euro NCAP paid extra attention to the crash and post-crash safety of the Mirai but found that the fact that it’s powered by hydrogen had no effect on its inherent safety."
The Mirai is rock solid not only in crash tests. The car noted good results also in Vulnerable Road Users and Safety Assist categories.
Here are the detailed results:
- Adult Occupant - 88 percent
- Child Occupant - 85 percent
- Vulnerable Road Users - 80 percent
- Safety Assist - 82 percent

See all details here.
Crash tests include:
- a frontal impact test, the car impacts a rigid full-width barrier at 50 km/h (31 mph)
- a frontal impact test, 50% of the width of the car is striking an oncoming deformable barrier (both traveling at 50 km/h/31 mph)
- Pole test - the tested car is propelled sideways into a rigid pole at 32 km/h (20 mph)
- Side impact test - a mobile deformable barrier impacts the driver's door at 60 km/h (37.3 mph)
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