China has announced a sweeping new vehicle safety regulation that will ban hidden and retractable car door handles, a popular design feature on many electric vehicles, including models from Tesla, BMW, and several Chinese automakers. The move is aimed squarely at improving passenger safety following concerns that electronic door systems can fail during emergencies.
The regulation, released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), will come into force on January 1, 2027. Existing vehicle models already approved for sale will be given a grace period until January 1, 2029, to comply with the new standards.
Mechanical Releases Made Mandatory
Under the new rules, all vehicle doors except tailgates must include a mechanical release mechanism that functions independently of electronic systems. This effectively eliminates fully electronic, press-to-release, or pop-out hidden door handles that rely solely on power and software.
Chinese officials said the policy responds to safety risks identified in fatal electric vehicle accidents where electronic door systems reportedly malfunctioned after crashes, fires, or power failures, trapping occupants inside.
What this really means is simple: if the car loses power, people must still be able to get out.
Major EV Models Affected
A wide range of vehicles currently on Chinese roads may be impacted by the regulation. These include Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y, BMW’s iX3, and numerous premium and mid-range EVs from domestic Chinese brands that use flush or retractable door handle designs.
Hidden handles have become a visual signature of modern EVs, often promoted for their aerodynamic benefits and futuristic appeal. But regulators are now prioritizing reliability over aesthetics.
Global Ripple Effects Likely
Industry analysts believe China’s decision could influence regulators far beyond its borders. Chris Liu, a Shanghai-based senior analyst at technology research firm Omdia, said China is the first major automotive market to formally prohibit fully electronic hidden door handles at a national level.
While safety concerns around these designs have been raised in Europe and the United States, China is the first to translate those concerns into a binding regulation. According to Liu, other regions may soon reference or align with China’s approach, especially as EV adoption accelerates globally.
For automakers, this could mean costly redesigns, engineering changes, and retrofits, particularly for premium EV models where retractable handles are positioned as a design differentiator.
Regulatory Pressure Has Been Building
The rule did not come out of nowhere. MIIT published a draft version of the proposal in September last year and invited public feedback. Around the same time, U.S. regulators were also taking notice.
In 2024, the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened an investigation into reports that Tesla’s electronic door handles failed to operate in certain crash scenarios. Although no blanket ban exists outside China yet, scrutiny is clearly increasing.
Design Meets Reality
China’s EV door handle ban underscores a broader shift in how regulators view high-tech vehicle features. As cars become more software-driven, governments are drawing firmer lines around what must still work when everything else fails. For automakers, the message is clear: futuristic design cannot come at the cost of basic human safety.




