
A 50-mph rear end collision into a Volvo would look about the same as that Camry probably did. Volvos are probably some of the safest, yes, but that comes at a definite price premium for newer models (a new S60 starts at $35K), which sounds like a concern for the OP. Even a used S60 can come in over 10-15K. Mercedes/BMW's are arguably at the tops of their classes too, but again, you pay for that. In my opinion, crash test ratings should be included with the research into ANY new car - and all of those fare well for much, much less $.
As was stated above, the point of the car body is to distribute the impact throughout the car to lessen the impact on its occupants. Newer cars are designed to crumple, and some of the best-selling cars (like the ones talked about above) also have very strong safety points. And some don't - the 1998-2002 Accords were notorious for breaking people's legs in crashes. 2002-2007 Jeep Libertys, arguably one of the best-selling small SUVs, throw people through the windshield.
Four friends that I knew from high school were killed in car accidents within recent years. One in a Honda CRX head-on collision, one in a 2005 Ford Taurus that hit a tree, one in a VW New Beetle that slid off the road in the rain, and one was thrown from the back of a Jeep Wrangler. They were all tragic, and I wish they were all here today.
With close family, I have been more lucky - almost all of us have been in something some way or another.
My dad hit a deer (and a Cadillac Deville a few years later) in my mom's 1974 BMW. Damage to the car was pretty extensive, and had it been my mom driving instead of a big guy like my dad, I don't know if she'd have been OK.
My sister and her friend were in a bad wreck in a 2001 Honda Accord; fortunately they both made it out with only a few bruised ribs from the seatbelts.
I was in a wreck with a girl in a Chevy Cavalier that rear-ended a Nissan that turned from a red light while we were doing about 35. The Cavalier was totaled, the impact hurt like hell, and I had a sprained wrist from trying to find something to grab on to to brace myself when it was punched by the airbag.
My mom was hit in a 1987 Buick Century a few years ago by a tractor trailer. It barely did anything to the car - smashed the taillight and bent the trunk a little bit, but she's still got injuries in her wrist and foot to this day. The car took the impact like a tank; it didn't crumple and distribute the impact as it should have. As it is, out on I-81 surrounded by trucks everywhere, I feel loads safer in my Volvo than I ever did in my 1988 Accord.







