US Senate committee blames safety tech for rising car prices

Could the US wind back mandatory safety technology or slow the roll out of autonomous emergency braking in a bid to reduce new car prices?

The US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation will hold a hearing on January 14, 2026 on new car affordability, claiming the average price has more than doubled in the past 25 years.

The CEOs of America’s Big Three automakers (Ford, GM and Stellantis) have been invited to attend, along with the Tesla’s head of vehicle engineering.

Committee chair Senator Ted Cruz claims new car prices have been “driven up by onerous government-mandated technologies and radical environmental regulations”.

He says the latter issue has been tackled by the current administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which effectively gutted the CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) standard by setting penalties for violating its limits to zero dollars. The act also halted the US$7500 federal tax rebate for EV purchases at the end of September 2025.

According to the committee, the average new car price in the US has jumped from US$20,356 (A$31,000) in 2000 to over US$50,000 (A$76,000) this year. Taking into account inflation, the average new car price in 2000 was US$38,395, meaning the effective increase is around 30 per cent, rather than 245 per cent.

The committee didn’t cite sources for its pricing numbers, but the latter figure seems to be taken from Kelley Blue Book’s new car average transaction price (ATP), which the publication calculates every month.

In September it sailed north of US$50,000 for the first time ever, hitting US$50,080. According to Kelley Blue Book, “buyers rushed to finalise deals” on EVs before the end of the federal tax credit. This not only pushed up both EV sales, but also the average transaction price as electric cars are more expensive than similarly sized and equipped petrol models.