Anyone shopping for a motorhome in the coming weeks will face a hefty price bump. Starting July 7, 2026, all new cars and light commercial vehicles first registered in the European Union must carry an expanded set of driver-assistance systems under EU Regulation 2019/2144. The rules previously applied only to entirely new model lines; now they cover every single vehicle entering the fleet for the first time.
The cost of compliance ranges from €1,000 to €3,000 per vehicle, depending on weight. Light motorhomes up to 3.5 tonnes require eight separate systems, including tire-pressure monitoring, a fatigue-warning device and the preparation for an alcohol-interlock. Heavier models above 3.5 tonnes must add a blind-spot assistant and information systems for moving off. Retrofitting older vehicles is usually technically impossible. Existing models already on the road are protected under grandfathering provisions.
The most striking upgrade concerns automatic emergency braking. Previous versions only reacted to other vehicles. As of July 7, the system must reliably detect pedestrians and cyclists and brake independently. The expected impact is significant: experts forecast up to 30% fewer pedestrian accidents and 45% fewer collisions with cyclists.
Another mandatory feature is the advanced driver-distraction warning (ADDW). Interior cameras monitor the driver’s eye movements. If attention drifts away from the road for more than six seconds, an audible alert sounds. Additional new requirements include an emergency lane-keeping assistant and improved head-protection measures for pedestrians struck by the hood or windshield.
Enforcement Gets Digital and Penalties Stiffen
Alongside the vehicle-tech changes, Germany’s road-traffic law has been updated since July 1, 2026. Commercial trading of points in the Flensburg system is now banned; violations can bring fines of up to €30,000. The statute of limitations for traffic offenses has been extended from three to six months, giving authorities more time to process violations.
Scan cars — vehicles equipped with cameras for automated parking-enforcement — are now legally permitted. In Baden-Württemberg, officials are evaluating AI-powered monocams designed to catch drivers using mobile phones. In Rhineland-Palatinate, similar systems have been running since spring 2025.
Workshops Warned: Calibration Is Critical After Repairs
The complex technology places new demands on maintenance. Austria’s ÖAMTC warns that sensors and cameras must be recalibrated after every windshield replacement or work on the suspension. Failing to do so risks false reactions or false alarms.
Critics point out that driver-distraction warnings can generate false alerts. If motorists regularly disable the systems manually, the safety benefit drops sharply. Still, traffic clubs broadly welcome the initiative — provided the technology works reliably.











