
Suzuki Jimny getting significant safety upgrade
Japanese outlet Creative Trend reports the updated Jimny, which is set to launch in Japan this August, will gain the following equipment: 'Dual camera brake support'
Reverse brake support
Adaptive cruise control
Backward false start prevention function
Of these, only the first will reportedly be fitted to both manual and automatic variants, with the others being exclusive to auto vehicles.
No other changes are expected, according to Creative Trend, apart from what claims will be 'significant price increase'.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
Suzuki Australia confirmed in February 2025 that the three-door Jimny, among other vehicles in its lineup, didn't meet newly introduced Australian Design Rules (ADR) outlining specific technical requirements for autonomous emergency braking (AEB) systems.
At the time, it said investigations were underway into making the popular off-roader compliant and that its 'position on this product' had 'yet to be confirmed'.
Sales of the Jimny, along with other Suzuki models that fell afoul of the new ADR, have continued as the automaker has secured sufficient stock complied before March 1, 2025, when ADR 98/00 came into effect.
The Jimny XL is unaffected by this new ADR. It features a stereo camera instead of a forward-facing monocular camera and laser radar like its three-door sibling, which allows Suzuki to offer both adaptive cruise control and night-time pedestrian detection. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
Suzuki Australia confirmed earlier this month that the three-door Jimny would be in greater supply during the first quarter of 2026.
We've contacted the company to confirm exactly when the updated Jimny will arrive here.
From January 1, 2025, the Jimny is unrated by independent safety authority ANCAP. Its three-star rating from 2018 expired on December 31, 2024.
The Jimny is by far Suzuki's best-selling vehicle locally.
To the end of June, it has delivered 4365 examples so far this year. The Swift light hatch was a distant second with 1953 deliveries.
Not only does the Jimny outsell every other Suzuki, it's more popular than almost every other so-called light SUV. The only exceptions are the Mazda CX-3 (8221) and Toyota Yaris Cross (5887).
MORE: Explore the Suzuki Jimny showroom
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
13 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Japanese cars in stock market went ‘nuts' after trade deal with Trump
Sky News business Editor Ross Greenwood discusses the trade deal America made with Japan on Wednesday. Making a car in Japan and then sending it to America was going to be hit with the original 25 per cent tariff US President Donald Trump ordered, which meant Japanese cars in America were going to be uncompetitive. Now, a trade deal has been secured where Japan has settled on a 15 per cent tariff. This has seen car brands in the stock market rise, with Mazda up by 3.7 per cent and Subaru up by 2.7 per cent on Thursday. 'They went nuts,' Mr Greenwood said.

Sydney Morning Herald
14 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Lost in translation: Trump doesn't seem to understand the ‘massive' deal he just made
The other big 'win' for the US was, Trump claims, the opening of its agricultural markets to US exports, particularly the market for rice, which has historically been extremely politically sensitive in Japan. According to the Office of the US Trade Representative, American farmers will have the same advantage as countries within the Trans-Pacific Trade Partnership in selling into the Japanese market. During the Obama administration, America was going to be a party to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a free trade agreement whose members include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam. It was Trump, within days of taking office in his first in January 2017, who withdrew the US from the TPP. America's farmers could have had the same trade terms with Japan as those countries eight years ago, if not for Trump. As for rice, Japan already imports up to 770,000 tonnes a year (the amount is capped to protect its own rice farmers), with the US supplying about 45 per cent of that volume. Yes, the US may be able to sell more and perhaps displace other suppliers, but Japan has reserved the right to decide the additional volume and quality of any extra imports from the US. Loading The bottom line for the trade elements of the deal is that it does lift the tariff rate on Japan's exports to the US – US consumers will pay more for Japanese products – but Japan has negotiated a deal that does only minor damage to its exports and economy in the process while presenting Trump with the ability to trumpet that he has opened up access to its domestic markets even though nothing material is likely to change. Indeed, unless Trump is forced to lower the rates on other countries auto and auto parts exports to the US, along with his sectoral tariffs on steel, aluminium and copper, the Japanese negotiators have given their key exporters a competitive edge. Trump says there's never been anything like the deal with Japan. He may be right, even if it appears he doesn't understand how it might play out in practice. There is a very large non-trade element to the deal. Japan has promised, it seems, to invest up to $US550 billion in the US, at Trump's direction and with the US allocated 90 per cent of any profits the investments might generate. The White House described the funding as the 'centrepiece' of the agreement with Japan, with the US Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, saying Japan had been awarded the 15 per cent tariff rate 'because they were willing to provide this innovative financing mechanism.' There are few details available on what is being loosely described as a Japanese sovereign wealth fund dedicated to investing in strategic sectors like semi-conductors, pharmaceuticals, steel, shipbuilding, critical minerals and energy in the US. The Japanese say the funds will come from their state banks and government agencies and will be in the form of equity, debt and guarantees. That suggests the $US550 billion, if it ever materialises, will be largely loans and loan guarantees for Japanese and US companies investing in projects Trump deems important. The detail will matter. Having effectively been extorted into agreeing to provide the funding, they are hardly likely to hand over $US550 billion without conditions and safeguards to someone who has declared bankruptcy four times. Loading They also have China's precedent to guide them. To end Trump's 2018-19 trade war, China agreed to buy a massively increased volume of US products. It eventually bought a little more than half what it had agreed to. Japan can slow-walk the handing over of the funds, knowing that, if it stretches the process out, a new administration in 2029 might have different views on trade. The investment agreement, apparently the brainchild of the Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick as it became clear that Japan wasn't going to accede to Trump's most aggressive demands for market access, is a peculiar one if Trump's aim is, as he has always claimed, to reduce America's trade deficit. If Japan were to actually deliver $US550 billion of new capital inflows to the US, it would increase the trade deficit, not decrease it. It would also probably help push up the value of the US dollar, which has been tumbling, making US exports less competitive in international markets. Did anyone explain that to Trump? Trump says there's never been anything like the deal with Japan. He may be right, even if it appears he doesn't understand how it might play out in practice. The deal with Japan provides a benchmark for the European Union, which appears very close to either agreeing its own deal or walking away and retaliating with punitive tariffs on US imports. It could probably live with a 15 per cent rate and no cap on its auto exports, provided there is nothing in the US demands that relates to its valued-added tax system or its regulation of social media platforms and big technology companies. Once Trump's August 1 deadline for deals is reached, the larger picture of Trump's trade wars will be clear, if still quite messy with its range of different tariffs, different rates and side-deals like the Japanese funding. Loading Crudely, however, the new 'baseline' tariff rate for America's major trading partners now appears to be 15 per cent. The average effective US tariff rate will have risen from about 2.4 per cent before he took office again to something around 20 per cent. Trade flows will be distorted, global supply chains severely disrupted, US companies and consumers will be paying a big new tax on their spending and the US inflation rate, and interest rates, will be higher than they would otherwise have been. Will that make America great again?

The Age
14 hours ago
- The Age
Lost in translation: Trump doesn't seem to understand the ‘massive' deal he just made
The other big 'win' for the US was, Trump claims, the opening of its agricultural markets to US exports, particularly the market for rice, which has historically been extremely politically sensitive in Japan. According to the Office of the US Trade Representative, American farmers will have the same advantage as countries within the Trans-Pacific Trade Partnership in selling into the Japanese market. During the Obama administration, America was going to be a party to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a free trade agreement whose members include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam. It was Trump, within days of taking office in his first in January 2017, who withdrew the US from the TPP. America's farmers could have had the same trade terms with Japan as those countries eight years ago, if not for Trump. As for rice, Japan already imports up to 770,000 tonnes a year (the amount is capped to protect its own rice farmers), with the US supplying about 45 per cent of that volume. Yes, the US may be able to sell more and perhaps displace other suppliers, but Japan has reserved the right to decide the additional volume and quality of any extra imports from the US. Loading The bottom line for the trade elements of the deal is that it does lift the tariff rate on Japan's exports to the US – US consumers will pay more for Japanese products – but Japan has negotiated a deal that does only minor damage to its exports and economy in the process while presenting Trump with the ability to trumpet that he has opened up access to its domestic markets even though nothing material is likely to change. Indeed, unless Trump is forced to lower the rates on other countries auto and auto parts exports to the US, along with his sectoral tariffs on steel, aluminium and copper, the Japanese negotiators have given their key exporters a competitive edge. Trump says there's never been anything like the deal with Japan. He may be right, even if it appears he doesn't understand how it might play out in practice. There is a very large non-trade element to the deal. Japan has promised, it seems, to invest up to $US550 billion in the US, at Trump's direction and with the US allocated 90 per cent of any profits the investments might generate. The White House described the funding as the 'centrepiece' of the agreement with Japan, with the US Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, saying Japan had been awarded the 15 per cent tariff rate 'because they were willing to provide this innovative financing mechanism.' There are few details available on what is being loosely described as a Japanese sovereign wealth fund dedicated to investing in strategic sectors like semi-conductors, pharmaceuticals, steel, shipbuilding, critical minerals and energy in the US. The Japanese say the funds will come from their state banks and government agencies and will be in the form of equity, debt and guarantees. That suggests the $US550 billion, if it ever materialises, will be largely loans and loan guarantees for Japanese and US companies investing in projects Trump deems important. The detail will matter. Having effectively been extorted into agreeing to provide the funding, they are hardly likely to hand over $US550 billion without conditions and safeguards to someone who has declared bankruptcy four times. Loading They also have China's precedent to guide them. To end Trump's 2018-19 trade war, China agreed to buy a massively increased volume of US products. It eventually bought a little more than half what it had agreed to. Japan can slow-walk the handing over of the funds, knowing that, if it stretches the process out, a new administration in 2029 might have different views on trade. The investment agreement, apparently the brainchild of the Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick as it became clear that Japan wasn't going to accede to Trump's most aggressive demands for market access, is a peculiar one if Trump's aim is, as he has always claimed, to reduce America's trade deficit. If Japan were to actually deliver $US550 billion of new capital inflows to the US, it would increase the trade deficit, not decrease it. It would also probably help push up the value of the US dollar, which has been tumbling, making US exports less competitive in international markets. Did anyone explain that to Trump? Trump says there's never been anything like the deal with Japan. He may be right, even if it appears he doesn't understand how it might play out in practice. The deal with Japan provides a benchmark for the European Union, which appears very close to either agreeing its own deal or walking away and retaliating with punitive tariffs on US imports. It could probably live with a 15 per cent rate and no cap on its auto exports, provided there is nothing in the US demands that relates to its valued-added tax system or its regulation of social media platforms and big technology companies. Once Trump's August 1 deadline for deals is reached, the larger picture of Trump's trade wars will be clear, if still quite messy with its range of different tariffs, different rates and side-deals like the Japanese funding. Loading Crudely, however, the new 'baseline' tariff rate for America's major trading partners now appears to be 15 per cent. The average effective US tariff rate will have risen from about 2.4 per cent before he took office again to something around 20 per cent. Trade flows will be distorted, global supply chains severely disrupted, US companies and consumers will be paying a big new tax on their spending and the US inflation rate, and interest rates, will be higher than they would otherwise have been. Will that make America great again?