From July 2026, every new car registered in the EU will have to be compatible with an alcolock system. The change has already triggered a wave of misunderstanding on social media, with many posts wrongly suggesting that all drivers will have to blow into a breathalyser before starting their car.
An alcolock is not new technology. It is a breathalyser device connected directly to a vehicle’s ignition system. The driver blows into it and, if alcohol above the legal limit is detected, the engine will not start. The system is already used in several European countries, mainly for drivers convicted of drink-driving offences and in professional vehicle fleets.
The decision on who must use the device, when and under what conditions remains entirely a matter for national legislation in each EU member state. Manufacturers are required only to provide the necessary electrical connection and space for future installation, so that if a country or court decides to impose the system, it can be fitted without complex modifications to the vehicle.
The figure behind the EU’s shift
According to European Commission data, drink-driving is responsible for around 25% of fatal road crashes on European roads. Large-scale studies have shown that alcolock systems are 40% to 95% more effective in preventing repeat offences than traditional measures such as licence suspension or fines.
The requirement forms part of the EU’s wider General Safety Regulation package, which also includes intelligent speed assistance, driver drowsiness detection systems, distraction warnings and event data recorders, widely known as “black boxes”. These measures fall under the EU’s Vision Zero strategy, which aims to bring road deaths in Europe as close as possible to zero by 2050.
Greece has already taken the first step with buses
In Greece, alcolock systems have already appeared in a very specific context. The system was first introduced on buses in the capital, with around 70% of new OSY vehicles already fitted with an integrated alcolock, while the remaining vehicles have the infrastructure for immediate installation.
At legislative level, Law 5209/2025, Greece’s new Highway Code, has significantly tightened both administrative and criminal penalties for drink-driving, strengthening the deterrent effect of the law. The framework provides graduated penalties, from a €350 fine and 30-day licence suspension for lower alcohol concentrations to a criminal offence for readings above 0.80 g/l in the blood.
What this means for Greek drivers buying a new car
In practice, anyone collecting a new car today will not see any visible change inside the vehicle. They will not be asked to take a breath test before leaving the dealership. The pre-installation is invisible to everyday drivers: an electronic connection that remains inactive and can be used only if Greek law or a court ruling requires it.
What is changing is the underlying approach to road safety. New cars are no longer simply mechanical means of transport. They are becoming smarter, more connected and increasingly capable of monitoring and intervening in driver behaviour. The alcolock is another step in a wider shift already under way, and Greece, given its roads and road safety record, has every reason to follow it closely.
What the new EU rules require, and what they do not
This is the key point missed by many viral posts. EU rules require the pre-installation infrastructure, not the device itself. Buyers of new cars will not find a tube hanging from the dashboard, and they will not have to blow into a breathalyser before the engine starts.
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