By Amy Bainbridge.
Some car dealers are peddling misinformation about the safety ratings of new cars in order to secure a sale, an independent vehicle safety advocate says.
The Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) cited examples in its submission to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC) market study of new cars.
“Our concern is that people are deceptively using the ANCAP ratings or deceptively misleading consumers in relation to the rating,” ANCAP CEO James Goodwin told the ABC.
“Some information given out to consumers is just wrong.”
ANCAP tests new cars for safety, and cars must rate five stars to be at the top of the range.
Mr Goodwin said some dealers are leaving the star rating off car advertisements when it rates poorly.
“It’s selective use, so where the car has a good safety rating they’ll use it, but when it doesn’t they won’t use it,” he said.
“We also see some misleading or deceptive advertising where the manufacturers will make their own claims about how safe the vehicle is, such as it having high-tensile steel or energy-absorbing steel.
“Or even saying things like it’s standard with electronic stability control, well that’s misleading because that’s a regulation.”
The Australian Design Rules cover standards for new cars, such as vehicle safety, anti-theft and emissions.