Providers and Administrators in blue logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Safety Features Gain Widespread Acceptance

Study shows most drivers keep them on compared to survey conducted last decade.

October 1, 2024
Safety Features Gain Widespread Acceptance

The percentage of time that such safety systems are kept turned on has dramatically increased since a similar study was conducted eight years ago.

Credit:

Pexels/PNW Production

2 min to read


According to a nonprofit group study, most drivers of vehicles with crash-avoidance systems now keep the features turned on, a sign of acceptance of the technology to increase safety.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety survey found that nine out of 10 drivers with access to lane-departure warning and prevention systems use them all the time, and seven out of 10 with visual warnings for exceeding speed limits keep those features turned on.

Ad Loading...

The traffic safety group said lane-departure features have the potential to prevent nearly a quarter of fatal crashes of passenger vehicles but have to date not significantly impacted insurance claims and reported collisions as have forward collision warnings and automatic emergency braking. 

It believes that’s because front-to-rear crashes are far more frequent than side, head-on, and road-departure ones that lane-departure features figure in. At the same time, many drivers may have also initially kept the lane-departure systems turned off to avoid their alerts. “By and large, automakers have solved that problem,” the institute says in its report.

One industry change that has apparently greatly increased use of the systems is that haptic alerts, such as seat and steering wheel vibrations, are more common now than audible alerts or are offered as an option that the driver selects, based on higher activation rates for vehicles that feature haptic alerts.

The percentage of time that the studied safety systems are kept turned on has dramatically increased since a similar study was conducted eight years ago, IIHS said.

“The results reflect a combination of better designs and a growing acceptance of crash avoidance systems, more generally,” said IIHS Research Scientist Aimee Cox, the study’s lead author. “The new designs make the feature a little harder to turn off and a lot less annoying for the driver.”

More Industry

F&Iby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 25, 2026

Report Finds Year-End F&I Strength

Deal volume ebbed and flowed throughout 2025, but product performance remained steady, according to automotive technology and data intelligence solutions provider StoneEagle.

Read More →
Industryby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 24, 2026

China Leads Battery Production

Between 2020 and 2025, gigafactory capacity grew six-fold and is set to grow another 118% by 2030, according Benchmark data.

Read More →
Industryby Hannah MitchellFebruary 24, 2026

Overall Consumer Confidence Up

Americans’ view of present business conditions, the labor market and family finances, though, are still in the dumps, and if they plan to buy cars, many target used units.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Auto Financeby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 23, 2026

Auto Loan Forecast Bucks Market Trend

Auto loan originations rose over 6% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025, but TransUnion predicts a slight decline in auto loan growth this year, making it an outlier in the company's overall lending forecast.

Read More →
F&Iby Hannah MitchellFebruary 23, 2026

Some Auto Brands Cheaper to Insure

A new top 10 list ranks the least expensive for average full insurance coverage on a clean driving record and high driver credit scores.

Read More →
Industryby StaffFebruary 20, 2026

Learn to Manage the Mayhem at Agent Summit

Rob Mancuso – president of Mancuso Automotive – will present a Keynote at the 2026 event.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Industryby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 19, 2026

Affordability Leads Top-Rated List

Edmunds’ editorial team tested 300-plus vehicles to help determine the Top Rated Awards for 2026, and one brand stood out with multiple rankings, including Best of the Best.

Read More →
Salesby Hannah MitchellFebruary 19, 2026

Auto Sales Still Sluggish

February forecast has new-vehicle deliveries still off from last year at this time amid high prices and vanished EV incentives. But J.D. Power sees business picking up from here as automakers target growth.

Read More →
Industryby Hannah MitchellFebruary 18, 2026

EVs Bring Most Satisfaction to Date

Study finds that adopters are true believers and that their satisfaction with the vehicles is growing, including for public charger experience, despite pullback of federal incentives.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Industryby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 17, 2026

Auto Manufacturing Drives Economic Growth

The sector generates over $64 billion in annual economic impact in South Carolina, making it the largest and fastest-growing manufacturing subsector in the state.

Read More →