10 February 2026
Article Series – 1 of 15 Insights
The EU already has a comprehensive legal framework for type approval and safety of vehicles with automated or autonomous driving. Some EU member states have already enacted a framework for the type approval of SAE Level-3 (highly automated driving) as well as the operating license approval process for motor vehicles with autonomous driving function in specified operational design domains (ODD) and defined operation areas (DOA) for SAE-Level 4. Teledriving has so far only been regulated in individual member states such as Germany.
The following guidance is intended to provide a compact overview of the most important current regulations, direct regulations for automated and autonomous driving, national peculiarities, and future projects that regulate or are intended to regulate autonomous driving.
When we refer to „automated“ driving we typically refer to SAE level 2 or 3 automated driving features (SAE level 3= highly automated driving). Key element here is that in these settings a driver is always present in the vehicle to take over automated driving systems at any time if necessary. As we will see the approval framework for these technologies is mostly EU type approval law driven but includes certain member state specific limitations.
When we refer to “autonomous” driving we refer to SAE level 4 autonomous driving, which means that there is no driver in the vehicle present anymore. For this, there are on the one hand specific regulations on EU level for type approval. This basically governs the permission to bring a vehicle onto the market which takes a more product compliance and safety related view. Member state laws include additional limitations concerning the actual permission to operate vehicles or services with autonomous technologies in a certain context or area (= basically the operating license in a defined operational design domain and defined operating area). while the operations are subject to a close technical supervision).
Regulation (EU) 2018/858: governs the type approval of vehicles at EU level, i.e., which technical and administrative criteria new vehicle types must meet before they can be approved for the market. It thus forms a basis for the approval of vehicles with automated systems.
Regulation (EU) 2019/2144 (General safety requirements): lays down type approval requirements for motor vehicles, their trailers, and systems, components, and separate technical units with a view to general safety and the protection of vehicle occupants and vulnerable road users. It contains requirements that are relevant to automated and autonomous driving functions while not addressing AI governance explicitly.
International Regulations (UNECE): The EU type approval framework incorporates regulations from the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), some of which govern specific use cases of automated driving technologies, e.g. UN Regulation No. 157 ("Automated Lane-Keeping Systems, ALKS"), which is part of the type approval requirements.
Cross-cutting regulations at EU level (not automotive specific): With the AI Act, the EU has established a comprehensive framework for AI governance & documentation duties. They serve as a basis and include principles which are also relevant for type approval frameworks while more concrete regulations for type approval of AI-driven vehicle technology is drawn up at the moment. Also, GDPR as cross-sector data protection regulations applies to automated and autonomous driving for data protection for vehicle & operational data and is to be regarded at any time.
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2022/1426: was published on August 5, 2022, and regulates the uniform procedures and technical specifications for type approval of the automated driving system (ADS) of fully automated vehicles.
According to the European Commission, targeted changes to the type approval framework are planned to enable the approval of vehicles in (regular) unlimited series production with automated driving functions. The measures include the establishment of "regulatory sandboxes" and automated driving corridors starting in 2026. A more recent statement from the European Commission on the current strategy can be found here. The entire framework is still in flux.
Germany has executed specific regulations amending the general Road Traffic Act (StVG) to govern certain types of automated and autonomous driving.
Over the past years, the StVG has been amended to gradually allow automated driving according to SAE definitions.
Level 3 (highly automated driving) is permitted if the driver uses the functions as intended and can take back control at any time.
A separate legal framework has been created for SAE levels 4, i.e., autonomous driving without a driver. For this, in 2021, Germany introduced its own law on autonomous driving by further amending the provisions of the StVG. The regulations are supplemented by the "Autonomous Vehicle Approval and Operation Regulation" (AFGBV).
The Road Traffic Remote Control Ordinance ("Straßenverkehr-Fernlenk-Verordnung”, StVFernLV) was published on December 1, 2025, and creates the first uniform legal framework for teleoperated driving on public roads that applies throughout Germany. Previously, such journeys were only possible with individual exemptions.
The StVFernLV essentially regulates the following:
The StVFernLV is based on general provisions of the Road Traffic Act (StVG). Section 1b of the StVG now includes specific rules for autonomous driving. The Remote Control Ordinance clarifies that a remote operator is equivalent in this sense, even if they are not sitting in the vehicle.
In comparison, the law on autonomous driving introduced in 2021 and the associated AFGBV regulate Level 4 autonomous vehicles in public transport in approved operating areas. The StVFernLV supplements this framework:
In short: Teleoperation is not autonomous driving, but a different driving mode that has been explicitly regulated in a separate set of rules. Both regulatory areas coexist and concern different types of driving control in traffic.
Automated and autonomous driving in Europe and Germany is legally possible, but strictly regulated. Regulations exist at various levels and require different official approvals.
The EU type approval framework (e.g., 2018/858, 2019/2144) forms the basis. Specifically for autonomous vehicles, there is already a set of regulations, 2022/1426, that addresses the approval of automated driving systems, but it only applies to limited areas of application. Further adjustments are planned to enable series production, widespread use, and national implementation.
Special regulations in Germany govern specific requirements for each SAE level:
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