Many drivers plan to avoid buying 2027 cars because of the new 2027 Law Advanced Impaired Driving Prevention Technology, citing severe concerns over in-car surveillance, data privacy, potential insurance tracking, false positives preventing vehicle operation, and overreach by the federal government
Advanced impaired driving prevention technology is a new law. In 2027 the technology will be put in cars. It uses passive, built-in sensors to detect if a driver is intoxicated or unfit to operate a vehicle. Federal law mandates these technologies in all new U.S. passenger cars, relying on methods like air-sampling breathalyzers, touch-based BAC readers, and AI-powered driver monitoring cameras to prevent the vehicle from starting or operating. This technology will monitor you driving habits. It can shut your car off or slow the vehicle down. It can limit you driving.
The push to end impaired driving revolves around systems that evaluate driver readiness without requiring active, deliberate actions (like a traditional breathalyzer) from the driver.
Key Technologies in Development
- Passive Alcohol Sensors: Systems that continuously sample the air in the cabin for alcohol molecules originating from the driver’s breath or use sensors in the steering wheel/start button to read Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) through the skin.
- Driver Monitoring Systems (DMS): Infrared cameras and sensors that track head positioning, eye movement, and blinking patterns. These AI-driven systems flag erratic, drowsy, or distracted behavior.
- Performance Monitoring: Telematics that analyze the vehicle’s movement—such as lane drifting and erratic steering—to infer impairment.
The Problem With The New 2027 Vehicle Law Advanced Impaired Driving Prevention Technology