MG 3 gets significant safety upgrade, pricing unchanged

MG has added more safety equipment to its entry-level model, netting it a better ANCAP rating than before.

The Chinese auto brand quietly added a front centre airbag and a driver monitoring system to MG 3 vehicles produced from April 30, 2025 onwards.

These changes, plus improvements to the light hatchback’s collision avoidance capability, have seen independent auto safety authority ANCAP award the MG 3 a higher four-star rating following another round of testing.

That’s up one star from the safety rating it received last year, also under the same 2023-25 test protocols, and it applies to the entire MG 3 lineup.

An MG Motor Australia spokesperson confirmed there have been no changes to pricing for the MG 3 despite the safety upgrades, so MG’s rival for the Mazda 2 and Toyota Yaris is still priced between $20,990 before on-road costs for the base petrol-powered Vibe and $31,990 drive-away for the hybrid Essence.

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The updated MG 3 received an adult occupant protection score of 74 per cent, a child occupant protection score of 75 per cent, a vulnerable road user protection score of 81 per cent, and a safety assist score of 70 per cent.

That’s up from last year’s scores of 72 per cent, 74 per cent, 76 per cent and 58 per cent, respectively.

The ANCAP report notes the MG 3’s autonomous emergency braking (AEB) system has been enhanced, and can now autonomously brake to avoid crashes when turning across or into the path of an oncoming vehicle.

While ANCAP praised MG for taking steps in the right direction, it sounded caution over the MG 3’s performance in one particular crash test.