Minister for Roads and Buses (): I wish to provide the
House with an update on further steps the government is taking to
implement the Automated Vehicles (AV) Act 2024 and kickstart economic
growth. Self-driving vehicles have the potential to increase
opportunities and break down barriers for how people and goods
move around the country, making transport safer, greener and more
reliable. Strengthening road safety, improving accessibility and
ensuring safeguarding remain central to this vision.
The AV act delivers one of
the most comprehensive legal frameworks of its kind, with safety
at its core. It sets out clear legal responsibilities,
establishes a safety framework and creates the required
regulatory powers. This includes measures designed to protect all
road users – pedestrians, cyclists, disabled people and
vulnerable groups – through a consistent, evidence-based safety
framework.
The AV act implementation
programme supports the government-wide programme of work using
artificial intelligence (AI) to deliver the Plan for Change, with
AVs providing a core
example of how AI
could bring tangible benefits to the public. This technology has
the potential to enable safer journeys, improve access to
essential services and enhance independence for people with
accessibility needs.
Today (4 December 2025), we have published an ambitious call for
evidence on developing the AV regulatory framework. This call for
evidence will help inform secondary legislation, guidance and
policy development, ensuring the AV regulatory framework remains
proportionate, forward-looking and responsive to emerging
technologies while upholding strong safeguards for public safety,
data protection and responsible operation.
The call for evidence is split into 2 main chapters: ‘getting
AVs on the road' and
‘once AVs are on the
road'.
Chapter 1 seeks further evidence relating to:
-
Vehicle type approval: the assessment of whether the vehicle
is technically safe before it is allowed onto the
GB market; this is closely
linked to the ongoing work at the United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe to develop automated driving systems
regulations.
-
Authorisation: the new process of authorising a self-driving
vehicle for use on GB
roads without a driver, allowing legal responsibilities to
shift to the authorised self-driving entity when the vehicle
is driving itself.
-
User-in-charge (UIC): if
a self-driving feature requires a responsible human inside
the vehicle, that human is the driver while the feature is
disengaged, and becomes a UIC when the self-driving feature is
engaged. The UIC will not
be responsible for the way the self-driving vehicle drives
when the feature is engaged.
-
Transition demands: a time-bound demand for the UIC to take control of the vehicle
when a self-driving vehicle needs to safely transfer control
to a human driver.
-
Operator licensing: the use of vehicles with self-driving
features that do not require a human driver to be present
while active in vehicles which may have no human on board at
all.
-
Insurance: AVs must
be insured to legally drive on our roads, but motor insurance
for AVs will be
different to conventional vehicles. As a result, insurers
will need timestamp data recorded by the vehicle, showing if
the system was active, to determine liabilities.
Chapter 2 seeks further evidence relating to:
-
In-use regulation: ongoing monitoring to confirm that
vehicles continue to meet the self-driving test requirements,
and in particular, the requirement to be able to safely and
legally drive themselves once on the road. In use regulation
will also monitor where authorisation requirements and
operator licensing requirements continue to be complied with.
-
Sanctions: a new set of civil and regulatory sanctions
available to government. They include compliance notices,
redress notices and fines as well as variation, suspension or
withdrawal of an authorisation or a licence.
-
Incident investigation: a process for no-blame incident
investigation involving AVs, similar to existing aviation
and rail investigation branches, allowing for continuous
improvement based on real-world evidence
-
Cyber security: appropriate cyber security controls must be
in place throughout the vehicle's service life, this extends
to the security of the operation centre and includes cyber,
personnel and physical security.
Questions relating to data, costs and benefits appear throughout
the call for evidence and there are standalone sections on
accessibility and environmental impacts. While the focus of the
call for evidence is on the safety framework, we are particularly
mindful of potential accessibility benefits and so have included
accessibility considerations.
We seek views from a broad range of respondents – including road
users, industry, academics, road safety experts, accessibility
specialists, first responders, trade unions and the wider public.
Their insights will help ensure that as AV technologies develop, they do so in
ways that strengthen safety, widen access and safeguard the
public.
A copy of this publication will be placed in the libraries of
both Houses and published on GOV.UK.