Audi A6 Wins IIHS Top Safety Pick+ Award, Most of Any Luxury Brand
The 2026 Audi A6 has earned a IIHS TOP SAFETY PICK+ award, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety’s highest vehicle safety rating, making it the seventh Audi model to hit that mark this year. No other luxury brand currently holds more 2026 TSP+ awards than Audi, a distinction buyers cross-shopping the segment on crash protection rather than badge prestige will want to know about.
What TOP SAFETY PICK+ Actually Requires
The IIHS tightened its 2026 criteria, and the award is now harder to earn than in previous years. Every vehicle chasing TOP SAFETY PICK+ status must score a good rating in the small overlap front test on both the driver and passenger sides, along with a good rating in the updated side-impact test. On top of the crash results, every trim level of the vehicle must come with headlights rated acceptable or good, closing a loophole that once let automakers advertise a safety award earned by a well-equipped trim while cheaper versions shipped with weaker lighting.
That headlight requirement has caught out plenty of automakers in recent years, as base-trim halogen setups often score poorly against the IIHS’s beam-pattern and glare testing. Audi confirming that every A6 trim clears the bar means buyers don’t need to pay up for a higher grade just to get the safety rating advertised in the brand’s marketing.
Seven Models, One Safety Case
Alongside the A6, six other current Audi models carry the 2026 TSP+ designation: the A5, the A6 Sportback e-tron, the Q5, the Q5 Sportback, the Q6 e-tron and the Q6 Sportback e-tron. That spread covers Audi’s core sedan and SUV lineup in the United States, from combustion models to electric variants, suggesting the structural and technology changes behind the award were applied across the range rather than tuned into a single flagship.

For shoppers comparing the A6 against rivals from BMW, Mercedes-Benz or Genesis, a TSP+ award works as a shorthand. It confirms a vehicle has passed IIHS’s toughest current battery of tests without needing to dig through individual crash-test percentages or side-by-side video footage.
Why the Small Overlap Test Still Counts
The small overlap front test, which IIHS introduced years ago specifically to expose weaknesses standard frontal tests missed, replicates a common but especially dangerous type of crash: a vehicle’s front corner striking a pole, tree or another car at an angle. Structures designed only for full-width frontal impacts can fail to redirect that kind of force away from the cabin, and the test remains one of the more demanding elements of the IIHS program even after a decade in use.
Passing that test on both the driver and passenger sides, as the 2026 A6 has, means the car’s crash structure protects occupants regardless of where they sit, rather than concentrating reinforcement on the side facing the more commonly tested driver’s corner.
What It Means for A6 Buyers
Audi of America has not attached a price change or trim restriction to the TSP+ announcement, meaning every 2026 A6 currently at dealerships qualifies for the award as built. Buyers don’t need to seek out a specific option package or upper trim level to get the safety credentials Audi is advertising.
With seven models now carrying the same award, Audi has built a case that its current lineup treats occupant protection as a baseline rather than a feature reserved for range-topping trims. For buyers comparing a full-size luxury sedan against SUV alternatives, the A6’s TSP+ status puts it on equal safety footing with Audi’s own SUVs, removing one variable from that decision.
How the Criteria Have Shifted Over Time
IIHS has raised the bar on TOP SAFETY PICK+ almost every year it has run the award, adding new test categories as crash data reveals fresh patterns of injury. The headlight requirement is a relatively recent addition, brought in after IIHS testing found that plenty of vehicles earning strong crash-test scores were still shipping with headlights that failed to illuminate the road adequately at night, a factor tied to a large share of fatal crashes that standard daytime crash tests never capture.
The side-impact update folded into the 2026 criteria reflects a similar pattern. IIHS increased the test’s impact speed and added a heavier barrier to better simulate a collision with a modern SUV or pickup, vehicles that have grown taller and heavier across the industry over the past decade. A car that would have passed the older side-impact test under the previous rules can fail the updated version, which is part of why fewer vehicles overall are qualifying for TSP+ status compared with earlier award cycles.
Audi’s Broader Safety Push
The seven-model TSP+ haul spans Audi’s combustion, plug-in and fully electric lineups, which suggests the safety-related engineering changes behind the award were not confined to any single platform generation. Electric models such as the Q6 e-tron carry different crash structures from combustion models like the A6, given the need to protect a battery pack rather than an engine bay, yet both have cleared the same IIHS bar.
That range of qualifying models gives Audi a talking point that goes beyond a single car’s crash-test result: a customer cross-shopping an A6 sedan against a Q5 SUV within the same showroom does not need to weigh one model’s safety credentials against the other. Both currently hold the same IIHS distinction.