Comparison

CHEVROLET V SERIES vs HONDA V SERIES

Side-by-side comparison of the CHEVROLET V SERIES and HONDA V SERIES drawn from the NHTSA consumer-complaint database, defect investigations, recall history, and NCAP crash-test ratings.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), more than 2,054,142 consumer complaints have been filed against U.S. vehicles since 1995, as of June 2026. This is a head-to-head safety comparison between the CHEVROLET V SERIES (1999–2001) and the HONDA V SERIES (1994–2003), drawn from that federal complaint and recall record; see our methodology for how the figures are compiled.

The CHEVROLET V SERIES (1999–2001, 2 model years) carries 2 NHTSA consumer complaints and 0 safety recalls, while the HONDA V SERIES (1994–2003, 6 model years) carries 13 complaints and 0 recalls. Severity indicators for the pair split as follows: 0 vs 2 crashes, 0 vs 0 fires, and 0 vs 0 reported fatalities.

Raw complaint counts favor whichever nameplate has fewer vehicles on the road, so the cleaner lens is components: which specific part families concentrate each model's filings? For the CHEVROLET V SERIES, the leading complaint category is service brakes, hydraulic (1 filings), followed by seat belts. For the HONDA V SERIES, it is power train:manual transmission (3), ahead of wheels and visibility:rearview mirrors/devices. When the two vehicles cluster around the same component, the problem is likely a shared supplier or a shared federal standard under stress; when they diverge, each nameplate has its own defect signature independent of the other.

Average NCAP crash-test scores are not uniformly available for both nameplates in this dataset, which typically means one or both pre-date the 2011 rating methodology refresh. Use the side-by-side table below as your scorecard, but do not treat it as a verdict. Recall counts tell you how many defects the manufacturer has already been compelled to remedy; complaint counts tell you what owners are still flagging today; and safety ratings tell you how the vehicle performs in standardized barrier tests — three different lenses on the same underlying question. The "also compare" links at the bottom of this page let you triangulate against neighboring nameplates in each model's competitive set.

CHEVROLET V SERIES vs HONDA V SERIES — NHTSA complaint, recall, and safety rating comparison
CHEVROLET V SERIES Metric HONDA V SERIES
N/A Avg Safety Rating N/A
2 Total Complaints 13
0 Total Recalls 0
0 Crashes Reported 2
0 Fires Reported 0
0 Injuries Reported 2
0 Deaths Reported 0
2 years Years on Market 6 years

Top Complaint Categories

SERVICE BRAKES, HYDRAULIC
1
0
SEAT BELTS
1
0
POWER TRAIN:MANUAL TRANSMISSION
0
3
WHEELS
0
1
VISIBILITY:REARVIEW MIRRORS/DEVICES
0
1
VEHICLE SPEED CONTROL
0
1
TIRES
0
1
CHEVROLET V SERIES HONDA V SERIES

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Frequently Asked Questions

Which is safer, CHEVROLET V SERIES or HONDA V SERIES?
CHEVROLET V SERIES has 2 total NHTSA complaints with 0 crashes, while HONDA V SERIES has 13 complaints with 2 crashes. Review individual model years for specific safety ratings.
How many recalls does CHEVROLET V SERIES have compared to HONDA V SERIES?
CHEVROLET V SERIES has 0 recalls across 2 model years, while HONDA V SERIES has 0 recalls across 6 model years.
What are the most common problems with CHEVROLET V SERIES?
The most commonly reported issues for CHEVROLET V SERIES are: SERVICE BRAKES, HYDRAULIC (1 complaints), SEAT BELTS (1 complaints).
What are the most common problems with HONDA V SERIES?
The most commonly reported issues for HONDA V SERIES are: POWER TRAIN:MANUAL TRANSMISSION (3 complaints), WHEELS (1 complaints), VISIBILITY:REARVIEW MIRRORS/DEVICES (1 complaints), VEHICLE SPEED CONTROL (1 complaints), TIRES (1 complaints).

Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) complaints and recalls data National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) complaints and recalls data