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Too Many Screens, Not Enough Safety: The Fleet Risk of Touchscreen Controls
How touchscreen-heavy vehicle design is increasing driver distraction and fleet risk.

Credit: Judie Nuskey
Recent data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shows that distracted driving claimed the lives of more than 3,200 people on U.S. roadways in 2023 alone, and tens of thousands more were injured in distraction-related crashes.
In fleet operations, where drivers are already exposed to hours of behind-the-wheel time and operational pressures, every additional task that diverts attention is a measurable safety risk. By reducing visual and cognitive distraction, for example, through thoughtful vehicle control design, fleets can help improve reaction times and reduce preventable crashes.
As dashboards become increasingly digital, many vehicles now rely on touchscreen interfaces for functions that were once controlled by physical buttons and knobs, climate systems, headlights, seat heaters, drive modes, and even defrost.
For fleets, this shift is not just aesthetic. It’s operational, behavioral, and potentially liability related.
The Human Factors Problem
In fleet safety, distraction is categorized into three types:
Visual distraction – Eyes off the road
Manual distraction – Hands off the wheel
Cognitive distraction – Mind off the driving task
Touchscreen interaction often requires all three to be used simultaneously.
To adjust the temperature in many newer vehicles, a driver may need to:
Locate the correct menu
Visually track a slider
Confirm the input
Monitor system feedback
By contrast, a physical knob provides:
Tactile feedback
Muscle memory
Operation without visual confirmation
That difference is not minor. It is neurological.
Driving is a high-speed decision-making task. When essential vehicle controls require screen navigation, cognitive load increases. Reaction time slows. Situational awareness narrows.
At 65 mph, a one-second delay equals nearly 100 feet traveled.
For a vehicle in traffic, that distance can mean the difference between:
A near-miss
A preventable rear-end crash
A costly liability claim
Why This Matters More for Fleets Than Private Drivers
Private drivers may tolerate frustration. Fleet drivers operate under different conditions:
Extended time behind the wheel
Higher mileage exposure
Dense traffic environments
Time pressure and route demands
Heightened legal scrutiny
Fleet crashes are not just accidents; they are liability events. In litigation, plaintiff attorneys increasingly examine:
Telematics data
In-cab footage
Policy enforcement
Training records
It is reasonable to anticipate that vehicle interface design could become part of future courtroom narratives.
If a critical driving function required visual screen interaction at the time of a crash, the question may not be whether the driver was distracted, but whether the design contributed. Fleet risk managers should pay attention.
The Consumer Pushback (And Why It Signals Risk)
U.S. consumer surveys consistently show infotainment systems rank among the most frustrating features in new vehicles.
Common complaints include:
Too many menu layers
Lagging responses
Overcomplicated controls
Difficulty making quick adjustments
The Button Comeback
Several automakers have begun reintroducing physical controls after customer feedback and safety concerns.
A hybrid model is emerging:
Touchscreens for:
Navigation input
Media browsing
Secondary customization
Physical controls for:
Climate adjustment
Hazard lights
Defrost
Volume
Frequently used safety-related functions
This shift reflects a renewed recognition of human factors engineering. For fleets, that engineering principle aligns with long-standing safety fundamentals. High-frequency, high-importance functions should require low cognitive effort.
Physical controls reduce glance time. They support muscle memory. They limit visual diversion.
They are not old-fashioned; they are efficient.
Fleet Specification Decisions: A Risk Conversation
When fleets evaluate vehicles, the focus often includes:
Fuel economy
Maintenance intervals
Upfit capability
But interior interface design rarely enters procurement discussions. Perhaps it should.
Questions fleet managers may begin asking:
Are essential driving controls accessible without menu navigation?
Does the vehicle require visual confirmation for high-frequency adjustments?
What is the average glance time to perform basic functions?
How does this align with our distraction policy?
Vehicle design can reinforce or undermine safety culture.
A Broader Safety Lesson
The analog resurgence in vehicles offers a broader takeaway for fleet leaders: Innovation should reduce complexity in high-risk tasks, not increase it. Physical buttons worked for decades not because they were simple, but because they were aligned with human capability.
As fleets evaluate policy, training, and equipment, the question becomes: Does this tool reduce distraction, or compete with it? Because in commercial operations, seconds matter. Feet matter. And liability certainly matters.
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