An insurance company Lemonade is offering drivers a 50 percent discount on their premiums with one major catch: they must keep their vehicle in self-driving mode and never touch the wheel.
The policy represents a dramatic bet that autonomous driving technology has become safer than human control. By restricting coverage to AI-piloted trips only, the insurer aims to eliminate the human error responsible for the vast majority of accidents.
Traditional auto insurance pricing assumes human drivers will make mistakes. Speeding, distraction, impaired judgment, and delayed reaction times all factor into risk calculations. Remove the human from active control, the insurer argues, and crash probability drops enough to justify cutting premiums in half.
The offer applies only to vehicles equipped with advanced self-driving systems capable of handling all driving tasks without human intervention. Current technology from manufacturers like Tesla, Mercedes-Benz, and others offers varying levels of autonomy, though regulatory and safety debates continue over what truly qualifies as full self-driving.
The restriction creates a significant lifestyle change. Drivers cannot take manual control even in situations where they might prefer to, such as navigating tight parking spaces, avoiding road hazards the AI might miss, or simply enjoying the act of driving. Touch the wheel during a covered trip, and the policy could be voided.
Critics question whether surrendering all control makes sense given that autonomous systems still fail in unpredictable situations. High-profile crashes involving self-driving features have raised concerns about over-relying on technology that remains imperfect.
For the insurance industry, this policy tests a future where human driving becomes the expensive exception rather than the standard. If AI truly proves safer, traditional drivers may eventually face premium increases for insisting on manual control.