UK Self-Driving Vehicle Framework Call for Evidence
Summary
The UK government has launched a call for evidence to shape the regulatory framework for self-driving vehicles in Great Britain. The consultation seeks views on safety features, authorization, licensing, incident investigation, and cybersecurity measures to implement the Automated Vehicles Act 2024. The sector is projected to create 38,000 jobs and generate £42 billion for the UK economy by 2035, with a passenger piloting scheme planned for spring 2026.
What changed
The government is seeking evidence on how Britain's AV laws should be structured, covering safety features, authorization and licensing, incident investigation, and cybersecurity measures. The framework will implement the Automated Vehicles Act 2024 and support deployment of self-driving vehicles expected to create 38,000 jobs and generate £42 billion by 2035. Industry stakeholders, technology companies, and accessibility advocates should engage with this consultation to help shape regulations governing autonomous vehicle deployment on UK roads.
What to do next
- Submit feedback to the automated vehicles regulatory framework consultation
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Press release
Next step on the UK rollout of self-driving vehicles as public, charities and businesses asked for their views
Have your say on the framework that will ensure self-driving technology is safely introduced on Britain's roads.
From: Department for Transport, Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles and Simon Lightwood MP Published 4 December 2025
Source: Waymo.
- call for evidence launched to shape how self-driving vehicles are rolled out across Great Britain, with a focus on safety and making travel more accessible for everyone
- road users, industry and accessibility groups encouraged to share their views on the framework for safe deployment – with the sector expected to create up to 38,000 jobs and unlock an industry worth £42 billion to the UK economy by 2035
- passenger piloting scheme will launch next spring to gather further evidence for the framework, marking the next step towards permanent use of the technology on Britain’s roads Today (4 December 2025), the government is asking road users, industry and disability groups to help shape the framework, which will ensure self-driving technology is safely introduced on Britain’s roads.
This is a key next step in implementing the landmark Automated Vehicles (AV) Act, which will ensure self-driving technology can help transform travel by strengthening road safety and improving accessible transport options – including access to essential services – especially for disabled people, older people and vulnerable groups.
Alongside breaking down barriers to mobility, self-driving vehicles are also driving forward the government’s growth mission by unlocking new opportunities for businesses to transform how people and goods move across the country. The sector could create 38,000 jobs and unlock the potential of an industry estimated to be worth up to £42 billion to the UK economy by 2035.
Under the existing code of practice for AVs, the technology is already being used in the UK, including in Milton Keynes where self-driving road shuttles are being trialled, and Heathrow Airport, which has deployed self-driving cars to trial transporting baggage between terminals.
Simon Lightwood, Roads and Buses Minister, said:
Self-driving vehicles represent a transformative opportunity for Britain – opening up independent travel for disabled people and older adults, whilst driving growth in a cutting-edge industry that will create high-skilled jobs across the UK.
Today marks an important step as we lay the foundations for this technology to thrive on our roads from next year. We’re consulting widely to ensure self-driving vehicles deliver real benefits: greater independence for those who need it most, safer journeys for everyone and economic growth that puts Britain at the forefront of this global industry.
The call for evidence asks people for their views on how Britain’s AV laws can encourage strong safety features to be built into self-driving vehicles and ensure they remain future proofed as the technology evolves. Other areas include how self-driving vehicles are authorised and licensed, incident investigation processes and robust cybersecurity measures to guard against international threats.
Once the new regulatory framework has been drafted, a further consultation will be launched in the second half of 2026 to ensure policy fully meets the needs of the road users, the disabled community, industry and wider stakeholders.
This timeline will support the UK ’s world-leading self-driving vehicles regulations being in place from the second half of 2027, supporting thousands of highly skilled jobs and innovation to deliver growth across the country.
This scheme has already been backed by major industry players, including Waymo, who recently announced their intention to bring self-driving ‘hail a ride’ services to London.
Meg Barnett, Senior Policy and Public Affairs Officer at Transport for All, said:
Everyday journeys to work, school or fun are essential to our lives, yet disabled people still face persistent barriers getting from A to B.
Self-driving vehicles could open up exciting new possibilities for our independence and freedom – but only if accessibility, safety and inclusive design are at the heart of this new technology.
We welcome today’s call for evidence as an important step towards this. We look forward to ensuring that disabled people’s voices and lived experiences shape the future of self-driving technology from the outset.
Mike Hawes, Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) Chief Executive, said:Safety is paramount for the automotive sector and this consultation is crucial to enable safe and responsible rollout of self-driving vehicles in Great Britain.
Given the intricacies of Britain’s road network – especially in urban areas – it’s vital that industry works with government and other stakeholders to build confidence in this cutting-edge technology. With self-driving vehicles now firmly on the horizon, road safety, access to mobility and economic growth are all set to improve.
Roads media enquiries
Media enquiries 0300 7777 878
Switchboard 0300 330 3000
Share this page
The following links open in a new tab
Related changes
Get daily alerts for Uk Centre For Connected And Autonomous Vehicles
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from DfT/CCAV.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when Uk Centre For Connected And Autonomous Vehicles publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.