Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

A Chinese automaker just filed a patent for car seats with a hidden loo

Forget cup holders, Aito's parent company just patented a hidden toilet that slides out from under your car seat.

Add as a preferred source on Google
seres toilet patent image
Seres

Chinese automaker Seres, the company behind the Aito vehicle brand, has been granted a patent for an in-vehicle toilet. Yes, you are reading it right. It’s a toilet for your car. The Patent number CN224104011U was filed in April 2025 and officially authorized on April 10, 2026.

While the news might seem amusing to many, the design is actually pretty clever. A toilet body sits hidden beneath the car seat, mounted on a sliding rail system. When you need it, you use the rail system to pull it out. 

Recommended Videos

When you are done, you slide it back under the seat. The whole thing is designed to take up as little space as possible, which matters a lot in small cars and electric vehicles where battery packs already eat up most of the room under the floor.

Is this really new?

Sort of. According to CarNewsChina, another company, Polestone, had a similar idea before, but their version was basically a toilet seat stored in the center console with disposable plastic bags. 

Think of it as a glorified camping toilet. Seeing the designs, I am not sure if Palestine was ever serious about it or merely did it for marketing purposes. Seres’ design goes further by fully integrating the unit into the seat itself, making it the most practical in-car toilet concept proposed so far.

Will this make it into production?

That is where things get complicated. Getting a patent is one thing, but actually building this into a car is another. The engineering challenges are significant: drainage pipes need to fit into an already tight chassis, wastewater has to go somewhere, and the sealing needs to be airtight so your car does not smell like, well, a toilet.

Then there is the psychological barrier. Even with lids and scents, convincing people to use a toilet inside their car is going to be a tough sell. I, for one, will never want a toilet inside my car. 

However, I also don’t take long drives with nothing in sight for hundreds of miles. If you take long drives with no loo facility available for long hours, this might just be the thing for you.

The company seems to understand the psychological barrier, so for now, the design is expected to be offered as an optional add-on rather than a standard feature. Whether it ever sees the light of day beyond a patent filing is anyone’s guess.

China has become a hub for car innovations. We are seeing ultra-fast EV charging capabilities, longer range on a single charge, and more, so much so that even US car buyers are taking notice. In comparison, this patent might feel silly, but at least Seres is thinking outside the box.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Tesla’s arch rival has already won at charging tech. Now, it’s testing a self-driving breakthrough
Transportation, Vehicle, Car

BYD has made no secret of its ambition to build more of its own technology. That includes everything from batteries to electric motors, and now even the AI chips that power advanced driver assistance systems. But despite all that momentum, the company’s latest move suggests it’s not ready to cut ties with outside chipmakers just yet. Instead, BYD appears to be taking the practical route.

A smart detour before the destination

Read more
Polestar forced to exit the US market. It’s a shame we won’t see its refined design anymore
Boring EVs caught a break as Americans lose Polestar
polestar-3-ev

Polestar, the Swedish EV brand controlled by China’s Geely, has been denied authorization under the US Connected Vehicle Rule. As a result, it will not be able to sell vehicles in the US from the 2027 model year onward. The company is not disappearing from American roads overnight. Polestar says it will continue selling existing US inventory of the Polestar 3 and Polestar 4, and current owners will still have access to service support. But for future models, the door is effectively closing unless something changes.

Polestar 3

Read more
The Wild West era of robotaxis is starting to end
New global rules could replace patchwork regulation with stricter safety proof for driverless fleets.
Self driving car from Waymo

Robotaxi rules have entered their first global phase. A UN vehicle standards forum has adopted the first international framework for fully autonomous vehicles, giving driverless fleets a common safety baseline across major markets.

The move lands while robotaxis are expanding from test programs into a bigger commercial race. In the US and China, private fleets more than doubled in 2025 to 8,000 vehicles across more than two dozen major cities.

Read more