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Chinese regulators have banned hidden car door handles, making it the first country to crack down on a design popularised by Tesla, as the increasingly common feature in electric vehicles raises safety concerns.
China’s industry and IT ministry, which regulates the automotive sector, said late on Monday it would require carmakers to equip each door with a clearly visible handle and a mechanical release, in contrast to electrically powered handles and locks.
The ministry said it had standardised the safety design of car door handles to tackle issues including “inconvenient operation” and “inability to open after an accident”.
The guideline will take effect at the beginning of 2027 and is expected to affect many EV makers that have followed in Tesla’s footsteps and embraced the design for its sleek, minimalist aesthetic.
Nearly all of the top-selling EV makers in China have several models with retractable door handles. More sophisticated features include voice-activated doors and those that respond to hand movements.
However, the unconventional designs have been criticised for making doors difficult to open during emergencies.
A fatal crash involving Huawei-backed Aito’s M7 sport-utility vehicle, which has fully recessed handles, in 2024 sparked debate after videos on social media showed rescue staff breaking windows in an attempt to save victims.
“The power and signal cables had been immediately severed, preventing the door handle controller from receiving the ejection signal,” Aito said in a statement. “Rescue personnel broke the window and pulled the mechanical door handle from inside to open the door.”
Concerns grew last year after two crashes involving Xiaomi’s SU7, which features flush battery-powered handles. Videos from an accident in October showed bystanders struggling to open the car’s doors.

In June, Xiaomi launched its YU7 SUV featuring fully recessed handles. Amid concerns about the design, Li Xiaoshuang, vice-president of Xiaomi’s automotive sector, said in a livestream on the company’s social media accounts last month that the YU7’s handles had mechanical releases inside and outside the car, along with three back-up batteries.
“Only a handful of cars on the market offer such redundancy,” Li said. “Our design is very advanced.”
US regulators are also investigating hidden door handles. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration last year opened probes into Tesla’s Model Y and Model 3 over concerns about the emergency door releases’ accessibility.