Aptera Three-Wheeled EV Keeps HOV Lane Access After California Program Ends
30 min
5 hours
20 hours
What Happened
California's Clean Air Vehicle decal program ended on September 30, 2025, removing HOV lane access for most electric vehicles. Solo EV drivers must now follow standard carpool rules requiring multiple occupants, adding significant time to commutes.
Aptera's three-wheeled vehicles are classified differently from four-wheeled passenger cars. Under California law, three-wheeled vehicles qualify for HOV lane use under the same rules as motorcycles and autocycles, giving Aptera permanent eligibility independent of incentive programs.
30 min each wayminutes
On a 15-mile commute during peak hours on freeways like the 405.
Why this matters
California commuters who rely on HOV lane access may find that Aptera's three-wheeled EV offers a lasting advantage over conventional EVs, as its eligibility is based on vehicle classification rather than temporary incentive programs.
Terms in This Story
- HOV lane
- High-occupancy vehicle lane, a traffic lane reserved for vehicles with multiple occupants or certain qualifying vehicles.
- Clean Air Vehicle decal
- A sticker program in California that allowed qualifying vehicles (like EVs) to use HOV lanes regardless of occupancy.
- Three-wheeled vehicle
- A vehicle with three wheels, often classified differently than four-wheeled cars under traffic laws.
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