Anonymous wrote:CRV, Mazda 5, RAV4.
Anonymous wrote:Tesla 3.
Mazda CX-30. She will love CX-30.
Anonymous wrote:Something with a manual transmission. You need both hands to drive, so texting or holding a phone is nearly impossible. And you don't really have to worry about their friends driving it, because almost none of them know how. I realize they're becoming harder to find, but my teen drives one, and I think they're worth looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recommend something newer and mid-size, whether a sedan or SUV. Smaller cars do less well in collisions with larger vehicles, simply due to their reduced mass. But, a larger and heavier vehicle may be less agile and have longer braking distances in an emergency, be more difficult to park, and be less fuel efficient. Older cars lack relatively recently-introduced important and effective safety features such as automated emergency braking, which can be life-saving if a newer (or indeed any) driver is momentarily inattentive or is caught by surprise in a situation where immediate and maximum brake application is called for. Additionally, new vehicles benefit from advances in safety cage/cell crash modeling and from improvements in metallurgy. That is, newer cars can be safer by virtue of improved designs and due to their fabrication with stronger structural components.
It's common but probably short-sighted to provide younger new drivers with old, small, cheap cars when what they really should have are the safest vehicles their parents can afford, even if the parents drive the older cars in the family. Those safest cars are almost always going to be the newest ones.
+1
Anonymous wrote:CRV or RAV4
Anonymous wrote:Volvo. Safer.