Suzuki Swift safety upgrades bring better crash-test rating, no change to pricing

The Suzuki Swift has shed its one-star safety rating following safety upgrades for models landing in Australia imminently, but its new, higher rating won’t push local prices up. 

Safety authority ANCAP has lifted the Swift a full two stars higher after the city-sized hatchback was reassessed under the latest 2023-2025 ANCAP testing protocols. 

The current fourth-generation Swift went on sale in Australia in 2024 with fewer safety features than the version sold in Europe, which saw ANCAP apply a one-star rating for the 2024 model year. 

This included a 47 per cent score for adult occupant protection, 54 per cent for safety assist, and 59 per cent for child occupant protection. However, its vulnerable road user protection result was a commendable 76 per cent. 

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In Europe, it achieved a three-star rating – which saw a 67 per cent adult occupant score, 62 per cent safety assist score and 65 per cent child occupant protection result – and the same 76 per cent vulnerable road user figure. 

That set of numbers – apart from the safety assist category, which only improved to 55 per cent – is applicable to new Australian-market Swifts manufactured from August 2025, due in showrooms from this month. 

“The updated ANCAP three-star rating reflects changes to the Australian-spec Swift, which now incorporates the same safety reinforcements as the Euro-spec model,” a Suzuki Australia spokesperson told CarExpert

“The Euro spec vehicle included additional front-end reinforcements that were not present in the earlier Australian-spec version. These reinforcements have now been applied to Australian models.”

ANCAP had dinged the Swift for the absence of absorption bars around the radiator and on either side of the wheel arch when it was initially tested.