Mercedes is hitting pause on Level 3 hands-off driving, for now

Skye Jacobs

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What just happened? Autonomous driving remains a long-term goal for Mercedes-Benz, but regulatory frameworks continue to limit how and where "eyes-off" systems can operate. For now, the company appears focused on refining solutions that can function reliably within those boundaries rather than pushing prematurely toward full automation.

Mercedes-Benz is pressing pause on its Drive Pilot program, resetting its path toward automated driving after encountering mounting costs, limited usability, and shifting supplier dynamics. The system – the first and only Level 3-certified product available to US drivers – offered genuine hands-off, eyes-off driving but only in narrow conditions. After debuting in 2023 on the EQS electric sedan and S-Class flagship, Drive Pilot will not appear on the refreshed S-Class expected to be unveiled this month.

The system had generated early excitement within the automotive industry, marking a rare instance of true Level 3 capability in production vehicles. Yet its deployment remained constrained to specific highway sections in California and Nevada, and only in clear daylight at speeds up to 40 mph.

Drivers had to purchase the requisite hardware upfront and then subscribe for $2,500 annually to activate the service. Despite its technological sophistication, the cost to implement and the limited customer benefit proved unsustainable for wider rollout.

Drive Pilot relied on an array of cameras, radar sensors, ultrasonic sensors, and lidar technology supplied by Luminar, the lidar manufacturer that later declared bankruptcy. Mercedes terminated its supply deal last year due to Luminar's failure to meet contractual terms, effectively capping further expansion of the system. Without this key sensor component, the automaker faced diminishing returns from continuing the program.

Instead, Mercedes is redirecting development toward MB.Drive Assist Pro, an evolution of its existing driver-assistance technology that the company classifies as Level 2++. Unlike Drive Pilot, the newer system requires the driver to remain engaged but can handle a wider range of circumstances, including city and highway conditions.

It uses a combination of 10 cameras, 5 radar sensors, 12 ultrasonic sensors, and an Nvidia-based computing platform. During test demonstrations on the upcoming CLA model, the technology showed capable, consistent performance across varied traffic situations.

While MB.Drive Assist Pro does not deliver the full autonomy that Drive Pilot once promised, Mercedes views it as a bridge to future systems that can scale globally. "We don't want to offer a system which, customer-wise, doesn't have much benefits, and we know another system will come with the next two [or] three years with much more customer benefit," company spokesperson Tobias Mueller told The Verge.

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So Nvidia talks this up at CES then Mercedes cancels it two weeks later. ROFL.
Its not cancelled they just can't profit from it right now. As the article points out it is only allowed in certain parts of California and a few other states. No point in invest a lot of capital money right now until the regulatory issues are settled. The problems they are facing are regulatory not technical, but regulatory issues can be as hard to overcome as technical ones.
 
Its not cancelled they just can't profit from it right now. As the article points out it is only allowed in certain parts of California and a few other states. No point in invest a lot of capital money right now until the regulatory issues are settled. The problems they are facing are regulatory not technical, but regulatory issues can be as hard to overcome as technical ones.
It's not going to be offered on their cars until an uncertain future time, how is that not canceled?

I didn't say it failed technically. Lord only knows when the regulations on self driving cars will relax enough to be profitably sold as a feature.
 
So Nvidia talks this up at CES then Mercedes cancels it two weeks later. ROFL.
The level 3 Drive Pilot system was the old one first appearing in 2023. It’s being canceled, and the new Drive Assist Pro system that uses tools from Nvidia is going forward. The difference is the newer system is far better, and Mercedes Benz appears to be requiring driver attention with it.

Drive Assist Pro appears to be the first real equivalent to Tesla FSD allowing drivers to give it an address to drive to. The big differences are that there are far more cars on FSD, FSD is continually improving via OTA software updates, and FSD is not geofenced (except by country). We’ll have to wait until the 2026 MB CLA actually receives the feature before anyone can truly evaluate it too.
 
The level 3 Drive Pilot system was the old one first appearing in 2023. It’s being canceled, and the new Drive Assist Pro system that uses tools from Nvidia is going forward. The difference is the newer system is far better, and Mercedes Benz appears to be requiring driver attention with it.

Drive Assist Pro appears to be the first real equivalent to Tesla FSD allowing drivers to give it an address to drive to. The big differences are that there are far more cars on FSD, FSD is continually improving via OTA software updates, and FSD is not geofenced (except by country). We’ll have to wait until the 2026 MB CLA actually receives the feature before anyone can truly evaluate it too.
Ah thanks for clarify that for me.
 
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