California Lawmaker Wants to Limit Vehicle Speeds to 10 MPH Above the Limit

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Every new car has a limited top speed programmed in at the factory, but for most, it’s usually deep into triple-digit numbers that most people never see. A proposed bill in California could drastically change the way automakers limit vehicle speeds, as one state senator wants to keep vehicles traveling within 10 mph of the speed limit.


California senator Scott Wiener’s Speeding and Fatality Emergency Reduction (SAFER) bill would go into effect in 2027 and require all cars sold there to come with speed governors. The bill proposes using GPS to track location and a database of posted speed limits to determine the appropriate cap. Drivers would be able to temporarily disable the governor, but the bill doesn’t detail the situations in which that could happen.


While this part of the bill will undoubtedly be unpopular, other parts should be welcomed. Wiener wants side underride guards on semi trucks, updated crosswalks, and new curbs. An alarming 4,400 people died in traffic accidents in 2022 in California, so parts of the bill could make a significant impact on safety in the state.


This feels like a bit of an overreach, but California isn’t the first entity to consider severely limiting vehicle speeds. A few years ago, Volvo announced that its vehicles would be limited to 112 mph for safety, and owners can set the governor even lower for inexperienced younger drivers. Of course, there are situations in which driving more than 112 mph or 10 mph above the speed limit would be warranted, so it will be interesting to see how California implements the bill if it passes.


[Image: Felipe Sanchez via Shutterstock]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Feb 02, 2024

    Learn to drive, people.

  • Yavor Yavor on Feb 04, 2024

    ah, another amazing law from Scott Weiner, the creepy big brain who removed the law that made it a felony knowingly infect people with aids.

  • Namesakeone If I were the parent of a teenage daughter, I would want her in an H1 Hummer. It would be big enough to protect her in a crash, too big for her to afford the fuel (and thus keep her home), big enough to intimidate her in a parallel-parking situation (and thus keep her home), and the transmission tunnel would prevent backseat sex.If I were the parent of a teenage son, I would want him to have, for his first wheeled transportation...a ride-on lawnmower. For obvious reasons.
  • ToolGuy If I were a teen under the tutelage of one of the B&B, I think it would make perfect sense to jump straight into one of those "forever cars"... see then I could drive it forever and not have to worry about ever replacing it. This plan seems flawless, doesn't it?
  • Rover Sig A short cab pickup truck, F150 or C/K-1500 or Ram, preferably a 6 cyl. These have no room for more than one or two passengers (USAA stats show biggest factor in teenage accidents is a vehicle full of kids) and no back seat (common sense tells you what back seats are used for). In a full-size pickup truck, the inevitable teenage accident is more survivable. Second choice would be an old full-size car, but these have all but disappeared from the used car lots. The "cute small car" is a death trap.
  • W Conrad Sure every technology has some environmental impact, but those stuck in fossil fuel land are just not seeing the future of EV's makes sense. Rather than making EV's even better, these automakers are sticking with what they know. It will mean their end.
  • Add Lightness A simple to fix, strong, 3 pedal car that has been tenderized on every corner.
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