AUTONEWS
EuroNCAP. The Chinese car MG 3 has a defect that customers don't notice(video)
All vehicles sold in Europe undergo crash tests to determine the level of protection they offer to occupants, adults or children, during frontal, side, and rear impacts. Better or worse, the different models for sale deserve evaluations from Euro NCAP professionals, to differentiate the less safe from the more safe, but this European safety organization had never, until now, been forced to demand a repair of design or production defects. That is, until testing the MG 3, a small Chinese utility vehicle whose seat fixings expose occupants to excessive risks.
During the off-center frontal impact, the rails that should fix the driver's seat to the chassis of the MG 3 proved unable to withstand the forces applied to them and gave way. This allows the seat to rotate and move suddenly and violently forward several centimeters (11.2 cm), subjecting the occupant's body to greater stress and potentially causing damage upon impact with the car body.
Faced with the Euro NCAP findings, MG identified the root of the construction defect and developed a solution to effectively protect occupants in the event of a collision. The seat rails and their respective fixings were replaced, ensuring that the seat and its occupant remain seated, and in their original position, during a violent crash.
Euro NCAP urges MG3 owners to complete free safety recall repair...Euro NCAP is encouraging all MG3 owners affected by a safety recall to arrange a free repair with their local MG dealer as soon as possible.
The recall follows independent crash testing carried out by Euro NCAP last year, during which the MG3 experienced a front seat rail failure in a frontal crash test. The issue allowed the driver’s seat to become unlatched during the impact.
Following a detailed technical review, MG agreed with Euro NCAP’s findings that the issue could also occur in real life and addressed the root cause with an improved design that was verified by Euro NCAP and eliminates any risk of the seat unlatching. The manufacturer swiftly implemented the change to production vehicles. MG has subsequently developed a repair for existing cars and has worked quickly with authorities in Europe and the UK to initiate a recall and repair campaign for affected MG3 models already sold to customers.
The repair is available free of charge through authorised MG dealerships, and recorded owners of MG3s built before August 2025 should already have been contacted directly by MG.
Euro NCAP’s testing programme exists to independently verify vehicle safety performance and identify potential risks, helping consumers make informed decisions and encouraging continual safety improvements across the automotive industry. The recall demonstrates the importance of collaboration between independent safety testing organisations, vehicle manufacturers and regulators.
New MG3 buyers can be confident that the issue has been adequately addressed. Owners of an MG3 built before August 2025 are strongly advised not to ignore or delay the repair, and to contact their local MG dealer to check if it is affected and have the recall work performed.
This was a significant safety flaw that Euro NCAP uncovered, and we were pleased with MG Motor’s robust response. Owners of the MG3 and MG3 Hybrid+ who haven’t heard about the vehicle recall or are still to take action should contact their local MG dealer, and they will confirm whether their car is one of the affected models, and arrange repairs, if necessary, at no cost to the owner...Dr. Aled Williams, Programme Director Euro NCAP
Euro NCAP Alerts MG3 Owners...The European automotive safety organization Euro NCAP has issued an alert to owners of the MG3 model to urgently carry out a free repair related to a safety flaw identified during crash tests. The problem was discovered in frontal impact tests conducted by the organization, which classified the situation as rare and potentially serious.
According to reports released by Euro NCAP, the driver's seat adjustment mechanism failed during the frontal crash test, causing partial torsion of the seat at the moment of impact. This failure significantly increased the forces exerted on the right leg of the test dummy, leading to a "poor" rating for protection in that area of the body.
Despite the incident, the MG3 received an overall four-star rating in European safety tests. Euro NCAP explained that the current scoring system does not provide for automatic penalties for this specific type of mechanical failure, although it admitted concern about what happened. The entity also revealed that it had never recorded a similar problem in hundreds of vehicles tested since 1997.
The manufacturer MG Motor later confirmed that it had introduced changes to the seat mechanism and the driver's airbag system in the most recently produced units. However, vehicles already delivered to customers require a technical intervention in a workshop to ensure that the problem is fully resolved.
Recall campaigns are already underway in several international markets, including the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. In some countries, thousands of vehicles produced between 2024 and 2025 were covered by the recall. The repair consists of installing additional components in the driver's seat fastening system and will be carried out at no cost to the owners.
Euro NCAP has now appealed to all MG3 owners to respond quickly to contact from dealerships and schedule the technical intervention. The organization guarantees that the solution developed by the brand has been validated and considered effective, reinforcing that the update is essential to ensure the expected levels of protection in the event of an accident.
The Chinese group SAIC, to which MG belongs, introduced the new parts in MG 3s manufactured from August 2025 onwards, with thousands of units in circulation still to be repaired, sold previously and equipped with the weaker fixings. But despite the manufacturer having designed new parts, which it installs in the defective cars free of charge, the reality is that owners are not responding as positively to the recall as would be expected, given the seriousness of the situation and the potential risks.
Contacted, MG representatives in Portugal, the Marketing and Communications Manager, Alexandra Beny da Silva, stated that “the process of informing customers about the need to proceed with the free repair of their vehicles has already begun”. He further stated that "more than 20% of the customers contacted have already had the repairs done." This seemingly positive reaction from Portuguese drivers is higher than the average in other countries, where MG 3 users tend to "turn a blind eye" to the safety recall. This led Euro NCAP, in an unprecedented move, to issue a statement drawing attention to "the need to install the new seat fixings as soon as possible."





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