End of the Nissan Tsuru: Here's Why

Published on November 3, 2016 in News by Frédérick Boucher-Gaulin

Some of you might be familiar with the third-generation Nissan Sentra, which was originally sold here in 1990. It led a good life, and although wasn’t really superior to its segment rivals, it did an honest job. However, did you know that while it is a distant memory here, it was still sold in Mexico?

The Nissan Tsuru is one of the best-selling cars of all time there—second-best in fact, right behind the Volkswagen Beetle.

This small, simple car is well loved there, especially among taxi drivers.

However, the Tsuru is not very safe: the Mexican government progressively adopted stricter safety standards, and the Tsuru couldn’t keep up. Without so much as an airbag, it couldn’t score a single point during collision tests.

This is why it will be phased out in 2019.

The IIHS just published a video that shows exactly why the Tsuru is so dangerous. In the above video, it impacts a 2016 Versa sedan. The result speaks for itself. Not only does it demonstrate a very valid reason not to buy a 90s Sentra, but it shows just how far safety has come in the last 20 years.

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