Browse Car Models

Explore all 3,559 car models with NHTSA safety data

Model Complaints
Q40 10
Q45 306
Q5 1,663
Q5 E 89
Q5 HYBRID 7
Q5 SPORTBACK 53
Q50 687
Q50 HYBRID 38
Q6 E-TRON 34
Q6 SPORTBACK E-TRON 8
Q60 103
Q7 1,321
Q70 26
Q70 HYBRID 2
Q70L 8
Q8 272
QUAD 64
QUANTUM 10
QUATTRO 143
QUATTROPORTE 66
QUATTROPORTE GTS 3
QUATTROPORTES 4
QUEST 2,913
QX 3
QX30 93
QX4 386
QX50 335
QX55 12
QX56 700
QX60 770
QX60 HYBRID 57
QX70 29
QX80 164
R 1 T 1
R 1100 S 1
R 1150 GS 1
R 1150 GS ADVENTURE 2
R 1150 R 8
R 1150 RS 1
R 1150 RT 7
R 1200 GS 114
R 1200 GS ADV US 5
R 1200 GS ADVENTURE 33
R 1200 R 46
R 1200 R US 3
R 1200 RT 147
R 1200 RT (AUTHORITY) 1
R 1200 RT US 2
R 1200 S 1
R 1200 ST 8

Methodology

Every model in this browser comes from the same three federal sources used on every detail page: the NHTSA Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) complaints database (consumer-filed, unverified safety reports), the NHTSA recall campaign API (official recall actions), and NHTSA New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) crash-test ratings. Complaint counts reflect raw owner filings and are heavily influenced by fleet size — a high-volume bestseller will accumulate more complaints than a low-volume niche model even at identical defect rates per vehicle. Recall counts reflect what manufacturers were compelled to remedy, not current risk. See the full methodology page for processing steps, data currency, and documented limitations.

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Reading complaint counts in context

Complaint volume on its own can be misleading. A best-selling sedan with hundreds of thousands of vehicles on the road will accumulate more raw consumer reports than a low-volume luxury or specialty model, even when the per-vehicle defect rate is similar or lower. When comparing models in this directory, treat complaint count as a starting signal — not a verdict. Look for clusters of complaints around a specific component (transmission, airbag, electrical), check whether NHTSA opened a formal Office of Defects Investigation review, and cross-reference the recall ledger to see if any verified manufacturer action was taken. Models that combine high complaint volume with multiple repeated recalls on the same subsystem carry stronger evidence of an underlying engineering issue than models with isolated reports.

How recall counts are interpreted

Recall numbers reflect the count of distinct manufacturer recall campaigns linked to a given model in the NHTSA Recalls API, deduplicated across years and trims. A high recall count does not always equal high current risk: many recalls are for fully remediable issues (software updates, supplier-side fixes, label changes) and may already have been completed by the time you read this page. Conversely, low recall counts on newer model years can simply reflect the natural lag between vehicle release and the surfacing of long-tail defects. We list recall counts here so you can spot historical patterns; for a specific VIN, always check NHTSA.gov/recalls directly with that VIN entered.

Why we publish this directory

The federal data behind every model card in this browser is fully public and free, but it lives across three separate NHTSA systems — the complaints database, the recall campaign API, and the New Car Assessment Program — each with its own search interface and export format. PlainCars stitches the three together at the model level so that a curious buyer, a journalist, or a fleet manager can see complaints, recalls, and crash ratings on one page without learning three government UIs. We do not editorialize on whether a model is "good" or "bad" — we surface the underlying counts and link straight to NHTSA for the source filings.