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Top driver-assist / “autopilot” stacks you can actually buy today, focused on Sweden/EU relevance.

Comparison matrix (EU focus, Oct 2025)

Brand / StackSAE Level (now)“Hands/eyes” statusWhere it works (EU)Notable capabilitiesNear-term EU outlook
Mercedes DRIVE PILOTL3Eyes-off up to 95 km/h (Germany), strict conditionsGermany (EQS/S-Class/EQE/E-Class trims w/ option; check spec)Certified L3 motorway following w/ turquoise light indicator; driver can watch media when activeRollout beyond Germany discussed; speed target up to 130 km/h longer-term, but needs approvals. (The Verge)
BMW Personal Pilot L3 (7-Series)L3Eyes-off up to 60 km/h (motorway traffic jams)Germany (7-Series/i7)First L3 usable in the dark; lidar + HD map stackNo confirmed multi-country EU rollout yet. (BMW Group PressClub)
BMW Highway AssistantL2Hands-free, eyes-on up to ~130 km/h (model/market dependent)Available on i5/5-Series, iX, etc., in supported marketsGlance-to-confirm Active Lane Change; strong lane centering at speedContinues expanding across models; still L2 (driver responsible). (BMW USA)
Ford BlueCruiseL2Hands-free, eyes-on in mapped Blue Zones15 European countries (incl. route Sweden→Italy on motorways) for Mustang Mach-ESubscription after 90-day trial; wide EU coverage for hands-free highwayCoverage/roads expanding; remains L2. (fromtheroad.ford.com)
Tesla FSD (Supervised)L2Hands-on/eyes-on (driver supervision)Limited tests/pilots in several EU countries; mainstream release still constrainedEnd-to-end NN stack (v12/13), urban turns/roundabouts in supervision; EU typically requires confirmationsUNECE rule changes enabling more automated lane changes enter into force Sep 26, 2025; broader EU use still depends on national approvals. (Tesla)
GM Super CruiseL2Hands-free, eyes-on on mapped roadsNot yet EU-marketed; NA onlyVery polished geofenced hands-free incl. lane change on mapped roadsGM signalled interest to bring to Europe (as early as 2025), but no formal EU availability yet. (chevrolet.com)
XPeng XNGPL2+/L2 (China)Urban + highway navigation w/ minimal HD mapsEU launch of NGP outside China planned ~2026Strong city stack in China; camera-first since 2024EU rollout targeted for Q4 2026; not a 2025 EU option. (Autoshift Byte)
ZEEKR NZP (Mobileye SuperVision)L2+ (China)Navigate-on-pilot (China), evolving in EUZEEKR in EU uses Mobileye SuperVision hardware today; NZP features mainly ChinaHigh-quality lane changes, point-to-point in CNMobileye-Porsche/Zeekr collabs suggest richer EU functions coming on future models. (Mobileye)
Volvo Pilot Assist / “Ride Pilot” visionL2 today (EX90)Lane centering + ACC; lidar for futureEX90 in EU; software still maturingLidar (Luminar) + Nvidia Orin platform for future supervised automationVolvo has flagged ongoing software updates; eyes-off features not yet enabled in EU production. (The Verge)

What this means if you’re buying in Sweden (right now)

Sensors & approach (quick notes)

Near-future watchlist (next 6–18 months)

Perfect — here’s a clear, real-world explanation of what Autopilot Level 2 and Level 3 (L2 vs L3) actually mean, especially for EVs in Europe.

🚘 SAE “Levels of Driving Automation” — simplified

LevelName (short)Who’s legally responsibleCan you take eyes off?Can you take hands off?Typical example
0No automationDriverManual driving
1Driver assistDriver✅ (briefly)Adaptive Cruise or Lane Keep
2Partial automationDriver❌ (eyes must watch)✅ (in some cars)Tesla Autopilot, Ford BlueCruise, BMW Highway Assist
3Conditional automationCar (only in defined zone)✅ (can look away / do other things)Mercedes Drive Pilot, BMW Personal Pilot L3
4–5High/full automationCarRobotaxis (Waymo, Cruise etc.) — not legal for sale in EU yet

⚙️ What makes L2 vs L3 fundamentally different

AreaLevel 2 (Partial automation)Level 3 (Conditional automation)
ResponsibilityDriver is 100 % legally responsible — must supervise system at all times.System is responsible while active — you may legally do other tasks (watch video, email etc.) until it asks you to take over.
EyesMust stay on road (infra-red camera monitors).Can look away — car monitors environment itself.
HandsUsually optional (hands-free allowed if camera confirms attention).Optional — car manages all driving.
Sensor stackCameras + radar (sometimes lidar).Always includes lidar, HD maps, redundancy (steering, braking, comms).
Operational design domain (ODD)Works almost anywhere but driver must correct mistakes.Works only in approved zones (e.g. motorways, good weather, < 95 km/h). Outside that, it shuts off.
FallbackDriver takes control instantly when needed.System warns and then hands back control safely; if no reaction, it must stop safely on its own.
Legal status in EUBroadly allowed.Allowed only after UNECE L3 approval per country (so far: Germany only).

🇪🇺 Example in practice

ScenarioLevel 2 car (e.g. Tesla / Ford BlueCruise)Level 3 car (e.g. Mercedes Drive Pilot)
Highway at 110 km/hCar steers & accelerates but you must watch the road and keep ready to intervene.Only works up to 95 km/h; when active, you can take eyes off — system handles everything.
Heavy traffic jamYou can let it roll but still must watch.Car fully drives itself, brake-to-stop and go; you may legally look away.
System errorDriver is liable if accident occurs.Car manufacturer is liable while L3 is active.

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