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Japan-Led ISO Motorway ADS Standards Published: ISO 23792-1 and ISO 23792-2

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Summary

Japan, serving as convenor of ISO/TC204/WG14, has led the development of two new international standards for Motorway Chauffeur Systems: ISO 23792-1:2026 (published March 27, 2026) covering framework and general requirements, and ISO 23792-2:2026 (published March 19, 2026) covering discretionary lane change requirements and test procedures. The standards establish baseline functionality requirements and test procedures for Level 3 Automated Driving Systems on motorways to support global ADS market expansion while reducing traffic accidents caused by human error.

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What changed

Two international standards for Motorway Chauffeur Systems have been published by ISO: ISO 23792-1:2026 establishes general system characteristics, system states, transition conditions, and basic functionalities for automated driving within a single lane with corresponding test procedures. ISO 23792-2:2026 specifies performance requirements and test procedures for discretionary lane change functionality, including processes for ensuring vehicle clearance and procedures for difficulty situations.

Motor vehicle manufacturers developing Level 3 Automated Driving Systems for motorway use should review these standards to understand baseline functionality requirements and test procedures that will standardize ADS specifications globally. The standards aim to address market challenges caused by differences in manufacturer specifications and lack of standardized test procedures.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

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4. April FY2026
5. New International Standards for Motorway Chauffeur System based on the proposal made by Japan has been published

New International Standards for Motorway Chauffeur System based on the proposal made by Japan has been published

Aiming to Realize a Transportation Society that Assures the Safe and Smooth Flow of Traffic (ISO 23792-1:2026 and ISO 23792-2:2026)

Japanese April 3, 2026

Economic & Industrial Policy Automated driving system (ADS) technology is expected to help realize a safe transportation society, and international initiatives are making progress toward putting this technology into practical use. In this context, a set of two international standards specifying requirements for the basic functionalities of an ADS and requirements and test procedures for additional functionalities, such as lane changing (ISO 23792-1:2026 and ISO 23792-2:2026), have been developed based on efforts led by Japan. This standard series will standardize ADS requirements to popularize automated vehicles equipped to provide certain levels of safety performance, looking to reduce the occurrence of road traffic accidents while facilitating the smooth flow of traffic.

1. Background

Major factors causing traffic accidents on motorway including expressways, are human errors such as distracted or careless driving. Statistics on accidents occurring on expressways show nearly half the cases being caused by vehicles traveling at 50 km/h or below on congested roads. Recognizing this situation and with the objective of realizing a safe transportation society, Japan developed and launched a Level 3 ADS (to perform the entire dynamic driving task, without human intervention, on a congested motor-vehicle-only road), becoming the world’s first in this field.

However, the market rollout of the ADS has been challenged by issues chiefly caused by differences in specifications and usage of manufacturers and a lack of standards for test procedures to verify basic functionality requirements. As a way to address this situation and for the purpose of expanding the global ADS market, the international standards for motorway chauffer systems (MCS)―ISO 23792-1:2026 and ISO 23792-2:2026 ―have been developed based on efforts led by Japan.

2. Outline of the standards

This ADS technology will achieve an environment that enables vehicle operation to perform the entire dynamic driving tasks under certain conditions and with the presence of a human driver as a fallback-ready user. In an environment where the system is running properly, the human driver can be freed from the need to keep hold of the steering wheel and keep a constant eye on the road ahead by leaving the driving task to the ADS operation.

1) ISO 23792-1:2026

As it is necessary for the ADS to be designed with the capability to cope with multiple different driving scenarios (See Figure 1: Example of the MCS geographical ODD), this standard contains non-scenario-based descriptions of general system characteristics, provides the definition of system states, and specifies transition conditions and other system requirements. Also, the document describes requirements for the basic functionalities of automated driving within a single lane and test procedures to verify these requirements (See Figure 2).

Figure 1: Example of geographical ODD of MCS

Figure 2: MCS test scenario

2) ISO 23792-2:2026

Lane changes involve the process of responding to changes in traffic conditions of the road ahead while at the same time looking behind for traffic in the adjacent lane, thus requiring higher-level techniques than those of driving within a single lane. This standard describes performance requirements of an MCS to change lanes automatically in response to a relevant request from the human driver or the ADS and test procedures to verify those requirements. Specific descriptions include processes for ensuring clearance between vehicles in the target lane before starting the lane change maneuver, conditions for automated vehicle control to change lanes, and procedures to perform in case of difficulty with continuing automated vehicle control (See Figure 3).

The set of two recently developed standards were published as international standards (ISO 23792-1:2026 on March 27, 2026; and ISO 23792-2:2026 on March 19, 2026) based on the proposal made by Japan to Working Group 14: Vehicle/Roadway Warming and Control Systems (WG14), for which Japan serves as the convenor, under the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)’s Technical Committee on Intelligent Transport Systems (TC204).

Figure 3: Illustration of discretionary lane change functionality and performance

3. Expected effects

The publishement of the recent standard series is expected to standardize ADS specifications and functionalities and thus support the popularization of automated vehicles equipped to provide certain levels of safety performance, helping reduce the occurrence of road traffic accidents while facilitating the smooth flow of traffic.

Notes

*1 Data extracted from Traffic Accident Statistics 2018 published by the Institute for Traffic Accident Research and Data Analysis.

*2 Official designation of the standard: ISO 23792-1:2026 Intelligent transport systems -- Motorway Chauffeur Systems (MCS) -- Part 1: Framework and general requirements

*3 Official designation of the standard: ISO 23792-2:2026 Intelligent transport systems -- Motorway Chauffeur Systems (MCS) -- Part 2: Requirements and test procedures for discretionary lane change

*4 This successful standardization is partly due to the achievements under the Project for Promoting Cetrification and Standards for Sophisticated Methods of Energy Supply-Demand Structure (international standards development for energy conservation; international standardization category), which METI has commissioned to a private entity.

Related links (in Japanese)

Divisions in Charge

  • Information on international standards: International Standardization Division, Innovation and Environment Policy Bureau
  • Information on automobile policies: Mobility DX Office, Automobile Division, Manufacturing Industries Bureau Related website
  • Standards and Conformity (International Standards)

Named provisions

ISO 23792-1:2026 ISO 23792-2:2026

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
METI
Published
April 3rd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Manufacturers Transportation companies
Industry sector
3361 Automotive Manufacturing
Activity scope
Automated driving systems Vehicle safety standards International standards development
Geographic scope
Japan JP

Taxonomy

Primary area
Transportation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Consumer Finance

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