Subaru Trailseeker Five-Star ANCAP Safety Rating: What Redlands Buyers Need to Know
Buyer Guides & Vehicle Reviews | Subaru
The Subaru Trailseeker has earned a five-star ANCAP safety rating (the highest possible result) under the 2023-2025 assessment criteria. Introduced to Australia in May 2026, the Trailseeker is a battery-electric all-wheel-drive small SUV available in two variants. The rating was published in June 2026 and applies to all variants built from March 2026 onwards.
At Barton's Capalaba Subaru, we believe Redlands buyers deserve honest, complete safety information for every vehicle we stock. Here is the full ANCAP picture for the Trailseeker.
How This Rating Was Produced: What You Need to Know First
The ANCAP safety rating for the Subaru Trailseeker is based on testing of the closely related Subaru e-Outback AWD and the Toyota bZ4X, both sold in Europe, rather than direct crash testing of the Australian Trailseeker. ANCAP was provided with technical information and additional test data demonstrating that those test results are applicable to the Trailseeker.
This is an accepted ANCAP methodology for vehicles sharing structural architecture and safety systems with already-tested models. The five-star rating is valid. Redlands buyers should understand that the rating is derived from tested sibling vehicles rather than from a standalone test of the Trailseeker itself.
What is an ANCAP Safety Rating?
ANCAP independently crash-tests and rates new vehicles sold in Australia and New Zealand. A five-star rating is the highest result achievable.
ANCAP assesses four key categories: Adult Occupant Protection, Child Occupant Protection, Vulnerable Road User Protection, and Safety Assist.
Subaru Trailseeker ANCAP Safety Rating: The Full Scorecard
The Subaru Trailseeker (built from March 2026) achieved the following results:
| Category | Score | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Adult Occupant Protection | 35.60 / 40 | 89% |
| Child Occupant Protection | 42.43 / 49 | 86% |
| Vulnerable Road User Protection | 50.47 / 63 | 80% |
| Safety Assist | 14.86 / 18 | 82% |
The rating applies to both variants sold in Australia only (not New Zealand). It expires December 2031.
| Variant | Powertrain | Drivetrain |
|---|---|---|
| Subaru Trailseeker AWD | BEV | AWD |
| Subaru Trailseeker AWD Touring | BEV | AWD |
Adult Occupant Protection: 89% (35.60 out of 40)
The passenger compartment remained stable in the frontal offset test. The driver received adequate chest and lower leg protection, with good results across all other body regions. The front passenger received good results across all critical areas. The compatibility penalty was 2.35 points.
In the full-width frontal test, driver chest protection was marginal and rear passenger chest protection was adequate, with good results elsewhere. These chest results in the full-width frontal test are the area of most note in the adult occupant result.
The side impact scored the maximum 6.00 out of 6 points with good protection across all body regions. For Redlands families navigating the arterial intersections along Redland Bay Road and through the Capalaba retail precinct, a maximum side impact score reflects real-world protection. The oblique pole returned 5.39 out of 6 with driver chest rated marginal. Whiplash scored 3.95 out of 4 and the far-side impact scored the full 4.00 out of 4.00.
Both doors and windows passed submergence testing. No eCall is fitted (0.67 default). Multi-collision braking scored 1.00 point.
Child Occupant Protection: 86% (42.43 out of 49)
The Trailseeker earned the maximum 16.00 out of 16 points in the frontal offset child test and the maximum 8.00 out of 8 points in the side impact child test, with good protection across all critical body regions in both tests.
ISOFix is fitted to both rear outboard seats with top tether anchorages across all rear positions. Two installation notes for Redlands families: the Type A capsule could not be correctly installed in the rear outboard positions, and one booster seat could not be installed in the centre rear position. Our team at Barton's Capalaba Subaru can help you find the right seating arrangement for your family.
An indirect child presence detection (CPD) system is fitted as standard but did not meet ANCAP's requirements and was not awarded points. The system is present; buyers should note this outcome.
Vulnerable Road User Protection: 80% (50.47 out of 63)
The bonnet and windscreen provided good or adequate head protection to pedestrians over most of the surface, with marginal to poor results at the stiff windscreen pillars and base of the windscreen. Lower leg protection was good with maximum knee and tibia points. Femur protection was mixed, with areas of good and poor performance (1.39 out of 4.5), and this is the primary driver of the 80 per cent VRU result.
Forward pedestrian AEB (Subaru Safety Sense / EyeSight, 5-80 km/h) was rated good, with collisions avoided or mitigated in all forward tests including turning scenarios. Whether navigating the school zones along Redland Bay Road, sharing the road with cyclists on the Redlands Coast trail network, or moving through the Capalaba Central car park, the forward AEB covers the scenarios Redlands drivers encounter daily.
Cyclist AEB was rated good at all test speeds. The Trailseeker provides both an information alert and a warning for approaching cyclists. Motorcyclist AEB and LSS both earned full marks, relevant for Gateway and Pacific Motorway motorway commutes.
AEB Backover was not standard on the tested vehicle and was not assessed. Zero points were scored. Confirm with our team whether AEB Backover is standard on your desired Trailseeker specification.
Safety Assist: 82% (14.86 out of 18)
Car-to-car AEB (5-180 km/h) earned the perfect 4.00 out of 4 points. AEB Head-On earned the perfect 1.00 out of 1 point. AEB Crossing was adequate. The lane support system (5-200 km/h) earned the perfect 3.00 out of 3 points, including in the most critical emergency lane keeping scenarios.
iACC is standard with camera-based speed sign recognition and a manual speed limiter.
The driver monitoring system scored 0.30 out of 2. A direct fatigue detection system is fitted, but distraction detection is not available. This is the primary area of underperformance in Safety Assist.
Safety Features: What Comes Standard
- Dual frontal, side chest, side head curtain, centre, and driver knee airbags
- AEB: car-to-car (5-180 km/h), pedestrian forward, cyclist, and motorcyclist (Subaru Safety Sense / EyeSight)
- AEB Junction, Crossing, and Head-On
- Lane keep assist and emergency lane keeping (5-200 km/h)
- Lane departure warning and forward collision warning
- Blind spot monitoring (fitted; not assessed in this ANCAP rating)
- iACC, camera-based speed sign recognition, manual speed limiter
- Direct driver drowsiness monitoring (fatigue only; distraction detection not available)
- Indirect CPD (fitted; did not meet ANCAP requirements)
- Cyclist dooring information and warning alert
- Seat belt reminders with occupancy detection (all positions)
- Multi-collision braking
Not available: eCall, AEB Backover on tested variant (confirm with dealer for Australian specification).
Test Drive the Five-Star Subaru Trailseeker at Barton's Capalaba Subaru
The Trailseeker's five-star result is a strong outcome for an electric AWD SUV. The testing methodology, the femur protection limitation, the AEB Backover situation, and the driver monitoring limitation are all disclosed here and in the ANCAP report. Our team is happy to walk through any of them in detail.
Come and see us at Bartons Capalaba Subaru in Capalaba, take the Trailseeker for a test drive, and let our team help you compare the AWD and AWD Touring variants. Visit BartonsCapalabaSubaru.com.au to browse current stock or book a test drive online.
Subaru Trailseeker For Sale in Capalaba
All safety scores, test results, and feature listings are drawn from the official ANCAP assessment report for the Subaru Trailseeker (May 2026 onwards), published June 2026. Rating is based on testing of the Subaru e-Outback AWD LHD and Toyota bZ4X FWD LHD. Applies to Australian-market variants built from March 2026 onwards. Not rated for New Zealand. Source: ancap.com.au.