Cybertruck's Top US Safety Rating Faces European Pedestrian Hurdles

Following its Top Safety Pick+ from the US IIHS, the Tesla Cybertruck struggles with Europe's stricter pedestrian and cyclist safety rules due to its rigid, angular design. Tesla's Grünheide plant manager doubts significant adoption without major redesigns.

Building on its recent Top Safety Pick+ award from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS)—the highest US rating—the Tesla Cybertruck excels in occupant protection tests like small overlap front crashes and side impacts. However, its stainless-steel exoskeleton and sharp edges clash with European standards.

Europe's UNECE regulations and Euro NCAP protocols prioritize vulnerable road users, mandating deformable front ends and energy-absorbing materials for urban pedestrian and cyclist collisions. The Cybertruck's rigid structure fails these, complicating type approval. André Thierig, manager of Tesla's Grünheide Gigafactory in Germany, stated he does not expect the Cybertruck to be 'driving on European roads in significant numbers' without changes. One modified Cybertruck operates in Germany under a special permit, but Tesla has cautioned against broader availability.

This highlights transatlantic safety divides: the US focuses on large-vehicle crashes amid truck/SUV dominance, while Europe safeguards pedestrians. Tesla celebrated the IIHS win on social media, mocking a skeptic, but European market entry would require substantial redesigns.

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Modified Tesla Cybertruck in Swiss workshop after safety upgrades for road legality, with engineer Raven Seeholzer and team.
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Swiss firm modifies Cybertruck for road legality in Switzerland

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A Swiss company called Teslab has extensively modified a Tesla Cybertruck to meet local safety standards, bringing it close to registration in Switzerland after nearly two years since the vehicle's US launch. Led by Raven Seeholzer, the effort addresses sharp edges and wiring issues that have blocked the truck in Europe. While EU-wide approval remains distant, demand persists with hundreds of preorders.

The Tesla Cybertruck has earned the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety's highest Top Safety Pick+ award for vehicles produced after April 2024. This recognition highlights its strong performance in crash tests, addressing earlier doubts about its safety. However, European regulations pose challenges for the vehicle's future there.

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Tesla Cybertruck lead engineer Wes Morrill detailed a minor April production change that enabled the model's IIHS Top Safety Pick+ rating, announced yesterday, with no impact on crash performance.

Tesla's board chair Robyn Denholm indicated that the company's upcoming Cybercab robotaxi might feature a steering wheel and pedals to comply with U.S. safety regulations. This potential change contrasts with the vehicle's original design as a fully autonomous two-seater without manual controls. Production is slated for 2026, but regulatory limits could restrict deployment without such adaptations.

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In the November 2024 Piedmont, California Cybertruck crash—profiled in Bloomberg's probe into 15 Tesla door-related deaths—firefighters faced 'poor access' to the burning vehicle, whose electronic doors and stainless-steel exoskeleton trapped occupants, contributing to three fatalities. Families of victims Jack Nelson and Krysta Tsukahara have sued Tesla over design flaws, intensifying scrutiny on emergency egress amid ongoing door failure reports.

A Cybertruck owner in New Mexico says Tesla's Full Self-Driving system steered his vehicle away from a head-on collision with an oncoming pickup truck. Clifford Lee was driving at 75 mph on Highway 54 when the incident occurred. He escaped uninjured after the system intervened at the last moment.

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Tesla kicked off Cybertruck deliveries in the United Arab Emirates on January 21, 2026, handing over around 63 vehicles at a Dubai launch event. This marks the electric pickup's entry into the Middle East after initial deliveries in South Korea, even as US sales continue to slump—as detailed in prior coverage—and regulatory hurdles block Europe.

 

 

 

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