For nearly a decade, the automotive industry has been conducting a massive real-world experiment in interface design, one that’s now revealing lessons for anyone building digital products.
Car manufacturers rushed into a touchscreen-first future, eliminating physical buttons in favor of sleek displays. It looked modern, felt innovative, and promised unprecedented flexibility.
But there was a problem. The experiment was failing, and the consequences were not theoretical. They were measured in crashes, injuries, and lives.
Today, the industry is reversing course, bringing back physical buttons for critical controls. And there’s a message here for every designer, product manager, and business leader building digital experiences, especially in high-variability contexts where attention is constantly fragmented, including markets like India, but by no means limited to them.
The Touchscreen Revolution That Went Too Far
For nearly a decade, car manufacturers rushed headlong into a screen-first future. Tesla led the charge, and legacy automakers followed with increasing urgency. Physical buttons disappeared like an endangered species. Knobs, switches, and tactile controls were deemed relics of an analog past. The dashboard became a canvas for ever-larger displays, with some models stretching across much of the vehicle’s width.
From a business perspective, the reasoning seemed sound. Touchscreens offered compelling advantages. They reduced manufacturing complexity by consolidating dozens of physical components into a single interface. They enabled over-the-air updates that could add features post-purchase. And they projected a modern, tech-forward brand image that resonated, particularly in the EV era.
The problem was not the screen itself. The problem was the setting.
Humans still had to use these interfaces while traveling at highway speeds.
When Good Design Theory Meets the Real World
Here’s where things get interesting for us as designers. On paper, touchscreens offer virtually unlimited flexibility. You can reorganize menus, add new features, and customize experiences in ways physical buttons never could. From a purely digital UX perspective, they often appear “better.”
But context matters, and context is where good design lives or dies.
In a moving vehicle, the environment is already working against precision. Roads are imperfect. Weather changes visibility. Traffic patterns are unpredictable. Vulnerable road users appear from blind spots. Even a small bump can turn a deliberate tap into an accidental one.
In some markets, like India, these conditions are amplified by density and variability. But the underlying reality is global. Any place with heavy traffic, rough surfaces, aggressive lane changes, snow glare, rain, heat, or unfamiliar roads creates the same usability penalty.
Research commissioned by IAM RoadSmart and the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory in 2020 revealed something startling. Drivers using touchscreen controls while driving experienced reaction times slowed by up to 57% compared to undistracted driving. To put that in perspective, that’s worse than driving at the legal blood-alcohol limit, which slowed reactions by about 12%, or driving under the influence of cannabis, which caused roughly a 21% delay.
Think about what that means in any high-demand driving situation where split-second decisions matter. At 80 km/h, a driver’s eyes leaving the road for 16 seconds while interacting with touchscreen menus translates to more than 350 meters traveled with reduced attention. That’s roughly the length of three football fields, and for cricket fans, about three pitches end to end.
Now imagine that same distraction in dense city traffic, on a rain-slick highway, or on unfamiliar roads where a pedestrian, cyclist, or vehicle can appear from anywhere.
This is not an edge case. It is a common reality in driving contexts around the world.
The Muscle Memory Problem
In 2022, Swedish automotive magazine Vi Bilägare ran a deceptively simple test. They compared twelve modern cars against a 2005 Volvo V70, a vehicle with dedicated physical buttons for every major function.
The results were startling:
- Physical buttons: Tasks completed in about 10 seconds
- Worst touchscreen-only car: About 45 seconds for the same tasks
That is more than four times slower.
Why?
Because physical controls leverage muscle memory.
With buttons and knobs, drivers build spatial and tactile awareness. Your hand knows where the volume knob is. You recognize the resistance of a dial. You feel the click without looking.
Touchscreens erase this embodied knowledge.
Every interaction demands visual confirmation:
- Find the control
- Align your finger
- Verify the action registered
There is no tactile boundary. No haptic certainty. No forgiveness for bumps or movement.
As designers, we often forget this: the best interface is not the most advanced. It is the one that works with human physiology, not against it.
The Return of Mechanical Door Handles: Designing for Stress, Not Aesthetics
The comeback of mechanical door handles in modern vehicles reinforces the same lesson.
From a UX and human-factors perspective, the return of mechanical handles is a textbook case of designing for stress, failure, and zero learning time. Electronic or flush handles optimize aesthetics and aerodynamics. But they violate core usability principles for safety-critical interactions: discoverability, affordance, and reliability under degraded conditions.
In crashes, fires, or power loss, software-dependent handles can fail entirely. Hidden manual releases often require recall and fine motor control, both of which degrade sharply under panic, smoke, injury, and low visibility.
Human-factors research consistently shows that in emergencies, people revert to instinctive, force-based actions. They do not explore. They do not problem-solve. They pull harder.
Designs that align with this behavior, visible, mechanical, one-step actions, dramatically reduce escape time and error rates. Investigations in the US have linked electronic handles to fatal delays during post-crash egress.
Regulators are responding in ways that mirror the earlier backlash against touchscreen-only controls. Proposed measures in the US and draft safety requirements in China call for power-independent, clearly labeled mechanical releases that work for occupants and first responders, regardless of vehicle familiarity.
This is not anti-technology. It is redundancy engineering grounded in safety science.
There is also a security dimension. As door latches become cyber-physical systems, they introduce new failure and attack surfaces. From a systems-UX standpoint, relying on a single electronic pathway for a life-critical function is brittle. Mechanical handles provide an inspectable, non-hackable fallback, strengthening both safety and resilience.
The design lesson is clear:
Any action users must perform under stress, without training, and with severe consequences for failure must have a simple, obvious, mechanical-feeling path.
Mechanical handles are not a regression. They are a mature acknowledgment that good UX prioritizes human limits, not ideal conditions.
When Regulators Step In
The touchscreen experiment might have continued longer if not for an uncomfortable trend. Distraction-related crashes were rising.
Euro NCAP reported a nearly 20% increase in distraction-linked accidents since 2020.
Their response was unusually direct.
Starting January 2026, vehicles must include physical controls for five critical functions to earn a five-star safety rating:
- Turn indicators
- Horn
- Hazard lights
- Windshield wipers
- Emergency call systems
Matthew Avery, Euro NCAP’s Director of Strategic Development, put it bluntly. Over-reliance on touchscreens forces drivers to take their eyes off the road, and that increases risk.
In the digital product world, we rarely see regulators intervene on usability. In automotive UX, safety made it unavoidable.
The Great Button Comeback
What followed was telling.
Major automakers did not just pivot. They admitted mistakes.
- Volkswagen restored physical controls after backlash against its touchscreen-heavy EVs, calling buttons essential for the five most important functions
- Mercedes-Benz abandoned haptic steering wheel controls in favor of traditional buttons after widespread frustration
- Hyundai reintroduced physical climate and audio controls in newer models
- Porsche brought back tactile climate controls in the Cayenne after customer feedback
These are not budget brands cutting corners. These are premium manufacturers with elite design teams acknowledging a flawed assumption.
What This Means for Digital Product Design
If you design apps, platforms, or digital systems, this story is not peripheral. It is directly relevant.
1. Context Determines the Best Interface
An interface that works in calm, focused conditions can fail disastrously in chaotic ones.
Ask yourself: What else is my user doing when they interact with my product?
Are they walking through crowded stations? Ordering something while commuting? Managing a task one-handed with a bag in the other? Trying to make a payment with spotty connectivity? The optimal interface has to account for these realities, not just the ideal scenario of an undistracted user in perfect conditions.
Designing for the ideal user is easy. Designing for reality is the real work.
2. Simplicity Comes From Reducing Effort, Not Visuals
The auto industry assumed fewer visible controls meant simplicity.
In practice, it increased cognitive load.
A single visible button for a frequent action is often simpler than three hidden menu layers, no matter how clean the interface looks.
3. Muscle Memory Is an Asset
Consistency enables learning. Learning enables speed. Speed enables trust.
Every time you move a frequently used feature, you erase muscle memory users worked hard to build.
Stability is not stagnation. It is usability.
4. Modern Is Not Synonymous With Better
Touchscreens looked futuristic. Minimalist interfaces look elegant.
But aesthetics do not compensate for friction, confusion, or risk.
Trends should earn their place through outcomes, not visual appeal alone.
5. Complaints About Small Things Are Signals
Early complaints about automotive touchscreens were dismissed as resistance to change.
They were not.
They were early warnings.
When users consistently struggle with something you consider minor, it is not noise. It is data.
The Hybrid Future
It’s worth noting that physical buttons aren’t returning completely, nor should they. Touchscreens remain excellent for certain tasks: navigation with visual maps, rear-view camera displays, occasional settings adjustments, and complex configuration tasks done while parked.
The solution isn’t to eliminate touchscreens, it’s to use the right interface for each specific task.
This hybrid approach recognizes that different types of interactions have different optimal input methods. Frequent, safety-critical tasks benefit from physical controls. Infrequent, complex tasks can leverage the flexibility of touchscreens. The best interface isn’t purely physical or purely digital, it’s thoughtfully mixed based on actual use patterns and context.
A Call for Evidence-Based Design
Perhaps the most important lesson from the automotive industry’s button comeback is this: we need to let evidence override assumptions, even when those assumptions are held by very smart people with good intentions.
The push toward touchscreens wasn’t driven by malicious designers or incompetent engineers. It came from intelligent people making reasonable-sounding business and design arguments. Those arguments just happened to be wrong when tested against real-world usage.
How often in your own work do you validate assumptions with actual behavioral data rather than theoretical benefits? When was the last time you set up a study to measure task completion time for a frequent workflow? Have you observed users in their actual environment, not just in controlled usability labs?
The automotive industry had to learn through customer complaints, negative reviews, regulatory pressure, and ultimately, quantified safety data showing their approach was measurably dangerous. That’s an expensive way to discover you’ve made the wrong design choice.
Bringing It Home
After two decades designing experiences, I’ve watched trends rise and fall, each promising transformation.
Some delivered.
Others quietly created new problems.
The automotive industry’s return to physical buttons isn’t a rejection of innovation or progress. It’s a mature recognition that the best design solution depends on context, human capabilities, and real-world constraints, not which technology is newest or looks most impressive in a keynote presentation.
Next time you’re tempted to consolidate multiple functions behind a hamburger menu, hide controls to achieve visual minimalism, or adopt an interaction pattern simply because it’s trendy, remember those drivers navigating chaotic Indian traffic, hunting through touchscreen menus while trying to avoid potholes, two-wheelers, and sudden lane changes.
Sometimes, the button is better than the screen. And recognizing when that’s true? That’s what separates good designers from great ones.

