Most drivers assume they would know if something serious was wrong with their car. That seems fair. If a vehicle has a safety problem, surely someone would call, email, text, send a giant red enve
Quick answer? You're fine. Nobody is getting arrested for flicking on the cabin light to dig through a glovebox at midnight. Not in any of the fifty states. There simply isn't a law on the boo
Remember when you bought a car and everything in it just worked? You paid for the vehicle, drove it home, and every button, knob, and feature was yours. No monthly fees. No "premium tier" to
Illinois is looking at a new way to deal with drivers who keep getting caught going way too fast, and it is a lot more hands-on than a normal ticket. Instead of just suspending someone’s lice
Battery-electric cars became a political mess well before Elon Musk turned public opinion against his cars by leading the "government efficiency" campaign that sent about 300,000 federal emp
Depending on where you got your driver's license, certain habits behind the wheel are probably second nature. Especially safety decisions based on weather. Might have left you confused why not eve
Heard some pretty bad rental car stories but getting arrested because it has a license plate frame could be the worst yet. Now a lawsuit's trying to get this Florida law tossed because it's un
Turn signals are one of the earliest car safety features. Early 1900s, some cars had mechanical arm "trafficators" that popped out of either side to show a turn. In 1908 Italian inventor Alf
Drive around for five minutes and you'll see someone on a motorcycle. Weekend rider, daily commuter, doesn't matter. They're out there. But what do you call them? Turns out it's compli
At some point, almost everyone asks the same uncomfortable question: When is it time to stop driving? And the honest answer is… there isn’t a number. Getting older changes things. Reac