SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
For over a decade, car interiors have been on a relentless diet.
Buttons disappeared.
Knobs vanished.
Switches went extinct.
In their place?
π₯οΈ Massive touchscreens.
π² Minimalist dashboards.
β¨ A futuristic promise of βsoftware-defined vehicles.β
But in 2025, something unexpected is happening.
Car manufacturers β the same ones that proudly removed every physical control β are now bringing buttons back.
Yes. Real buttons. You can feel them. Press them. Trust them.
So what changed?
Why did touchscreens take over in the first place?
And why is the industry now quietly admitting⦠they went too far?
Welcome to the great automotive course correction. π
Letβs rewind to the early 2010s.
Smartphones were booming π±
Tablets were everywhere
Tesla was redefining what a car interior could look like β‘
Suddenly, physical buttons felt⦠old.
From a manufacturing standpoint, touchscreens were a dream.
Instead of:
Automakers could install one digital display.
π Lower part count
π Lower assembly complexity
π Lower production costs
A single screen could replace:
From a spreadsheet perspective?
Touchscreens were unbeatable.
Screens also unlocked something powerful: software control.
Manufacturers could now:
π Over-the-air updates (OTAs) made cars feel more like iPhones on wheels.
Why redesign hardware when software could do everything?
Letβs be honest.
Touchscreens looked cool.
A clean dashboard with:
It screamed:
βThis is the future.β
Especially in EVs, where minimalism became synonymous with innovation β‘
Screens werenβt just functional β they were status symbols.
Screens allowed automakers to:
But what looked elegant in design studios didnβt always work on real roads.
And thatβs where the problems beganβ¦ π¨
At first, drivers adapted.
Then they complained.
Then regulators noticed.
Then data confirmed what people felt instinctively.
Unlike physical buttons, touchscreens:
You canβt feel a touchscreen.
Which means:
π Eyes off the road
π§ More cognitive load
β±οΈ Slower reaction times
π Studies show touchscreen usage can slow driver reaction time by up to 57%.
Thatβs not just inconvenient.
Thatβs dangerous.
With physical buttons:
This is called muscle memory.
Touchscreens break this completely.
Every interaction becomes:
Look β Find β Tap β Confirm β Correct mistake β Repeat π€
For simple actions like:
Thatβs unacceptable while driving at highway speeds.
Drivers started asking uncomfortable questions:
Why does it take three taps to turn down the AC?
Why is the seat heater hidden inside a submenu?
Why does my screen lagβ¦ while Iβm driving?
What was sold as βmodernβ started feeling annoying.
And frustration is the enemy of brand loyalty.
The turning point didnβt come from designers.
It came from safety regulators.
Europeβs independent safety authority issued a clear message:
To achieve a five-star safety rating, vehicles must have physical controls for critical functions.
Including:
No touch-only shortcuts.
No buried menus.
This forced automakers to rethink their designs β globally π
Because what fails in Europe often doesnβt survive in the US either.
Hereβs the most interesting part.
No company made a big announcement saying:
βWe were wrong.β
But their dashboards tell the story.
Major manufacturers now reintroducing buttons include:
Theyβve learned:
Minimalism is not worth compromising safety.
Buttons are returning for:
Because what you use while driving must be effortless.
Touchscreens arenβt disappearing.
Theyβre just being repositioned.
Screens remain excellent for:
These are non-urgent tasks.
Tasks you perform:
Anything used while the car is in motion needs:
Thatβs where buttons shine π
This isnβt nostalgia.
Itβs ergonomics.
This story isnβt just about cars.
Itβs about technology maturity.
Every tech wave goes through phases:
Cars are now in Phase 4.
Touchscreens were revolutionary β but not flawless.
Buttons never disappeared because theyβre βold.β
They survived because theyβre human.
American roads mean:
For US consumers, safety and convenience arenβt optional.
And automakers know:
One distracted-driving lawsuit costs more than a thousand buttons.
The automotive industry didnβt fail.
It learned.
It learned that:
Buttons didnβt come back because theyβre nostalgic.
They came back because:
π They work
π Theyβre safe
π They respect how humans actually behave
In a world obsessed with digital everything, the humble button reminds us:
Sometimes, the future looks a lot like the past.
Old is Gold. π‘