2026 is only a couple of months old, yet a federally mandated ‘kill switch’ in cars has already become a huge story, as the NHTSA is openly admitting that the technology isn’t ready for primetime.
It turns out that fear over potentially stranding thousands of sober drivers was enough to force the government to push back its timeline on anti-drunk driving tech.
According to the report released this month, regulators reviewed multiple approaches, including breath sensors, touch-based alcohol detectors, camera-based driver monitoring systems, and behavior-tracking software that looks for signs of impairment such as erratic steering. None of them currently meets the legal requirement for a system that works passively, accurately, and without requiring driver input.




