National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA /ˈnɪtsə/ NITS) is an agency of the U.S. federal government, part of the Department of Transportation, focused on transportation safety in the United States.

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
Agency overview
FormedDecember 31, 1970 (1970-12-31)
Preceding agency
  • National Highway Safety Bureau
JurisdictionU.S. motor vehicles
HeadquartersWashington, D.C., U.S.
Motto"People saving people"
Employees626 (FY 2017)
Annual budget$899 million (FY 2017)
Agency executive
Parent departmentDepartment of Transportation
Websitenhtsa.gov
Footnotes
Leadership

NHTSA is charged with writing and enforcing Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards as well as regulations for motor vehicle theft resistance and fuel economy, as part of the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) system. FMVSS 209 was the first standard to become effective on March 1, 1967. NHTSA licenses vehicle manufacturers and importers, allows or blocks the import of vehicles and safety-regulated vehicle parts, administers the vehicle identification number (VIN) system, develops the anthropomorphic dummies used in U.S. safety testing as well as the test protocols themselves, and provides vehicle insurance cost information. The agency has asserted preemptive regulatory authority over greenhouse gas emissions, but this has been disputed by such state regulatory agencies as the California Air Resources Board.

The Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards are contained in the United States 49 CFR 571. Additional federal vehicle standards are contained elsewhere in the CFR. Another of NHTSA's activities is the collection of data about motor vehicle crashes, available in various data files maintained by the National Center for Statistics and Analysis, in particular the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), the Crash Investigation Sampling System (CISS, where technicians investigate a random sample of police crash reports), and others.

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