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

After hidden doors, yoke-style half-steering wheels could go out of vogue soon

From hidden door handles to half steering wheels, China's regulators are reshaping car design priorities, emphasizing crash safety and emergency access over bold, space-age aesthetics.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Tesla yoke-style steering wheel.
Tesla

China is officially telling automakers to get a full grip: a complete wheel-style steering wheel. According to a draft from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the country plans to ban “yoke-style” or “half” steering wheels (via CarNewsChina).

The ban comes into effect from January 1, 2027, as part of the updated national safety standard (GB 11557-202X). While the documentation doesn’t explicitly name yokes, the new crash-testing requirements make it effectively impossible to pass.

China tightens its grip on steering design

The updated safety norms require steering wheels to pass an impact test at 10 specific points around the rim, and guess what: a yoke-style steering wheel, which doesn’t have a top part, can’t exactly volunteer for the test. It’s a no rim, no test, no approval kind of situation.

Recommended Videos

Chinese regulators explain how the choice isn’t about aesthetics. Rounder steering wheels offer a broader surface area, preventing drivers from pitching forward past the wheel in the event of a crash. Concerns about airbag deployment have also fueled the new norms.

The move will affect brands that have embraced the sci-fi look, including Tesla (among the major automakers that popularized the yoke-style steering wheels), Lexus, IM Motors, and Mercedes-Benz. While new models must comply from 2027, existing models might get a 13-month transition period.

China is banning fully retractable door handles starting January 1, 2027.

Under the proposed rules, vehicles weighing less than 3.5 tons must be equipped with interior and exterior door handles that include a mechanical emergency opening function. pic.twitter.com/FhDOjcBqSB

— Nic Cruz Patane (@niccruzpatane) December 26, 2025

Automakers rethink the spaceship look

Most recently, China also banned flush, pop-out door handles over safety concerns, stating that motorized handles can complicate emergency exit from vehicles.

Whether it is the yoke-style steering wheel or the flush-type door handles, regulators are dialing back flashy design trends in favor of safety and practicality.

For Chinese drivers who never quite got used to shuffling a yoke through a tight parking space, the news might come as a relief. For those chasing a spaceship-like vibe, automakers have to get back to the drawing board to continue selling models in the region.

For now, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) hasn’t given any indication about such bans coming to the United States, nor do the regulatory bodies here have a norm that automatically rules out yoke-style steering wheels.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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
Google Meet finally lands on Android Auto, giving you one less excuse to skip a meeting
Android users can now join scheduled meetings and audio calls from their car's dashboard, catching up to what iPhone users have had for months.
Google Meet on Android Auto

Android Auto is finally getting Google Meet, months after the video conferencing app made its debut on Apple CarPlay. Android users can now pull up scheduled meetings and dial recent contacts straight from their car's display instead of reaching for their phone.

How it works behind the wheel

Read more
Waymo’s robotaxis keep finding new things to drive into, and construction zones are the latest
Thirteen construction zone incidents, one fleet recall, and a passenger who thought the end was near.
A Hyundai Ioniq 5 is equipped as a robotaxi.

Waymo has recalled its entire fleet of nearly 4,000 robotaxis to prevent them from driving on highways after identifying at least 13 instances where its vehicles drove straight into highway sections closed for construction. 

This is the company's sixth recall in under a year, and follows separate incidents involving flooded roads, telephone poles, chains and gates, towed trucks, and school buses.

Read more