McLaren May Rein In Its Supercars: Speed Limits Could Soon Depend on Location

McLaren supercars will activate Track Mode automatically — but only on the racetrack.

December 3, 2025 at 9:20 PM / Technology

McLaren is exploring technology that could fundamentally change how its supercars behave. The company recently filed a patent for a system that unlocks full Track Mode only when the car is in an “approved location” — essentially, a racetrack. The reasoning is straightforward: the patent notes that the track configuration for suspension and electronics may not meet road-safety standards.

Unlike standard Sport Mode, which is legal on public roads and mainly sharpens throttle and steering response, Track Mode disables or significantly relaxes many driver-assist systems. On a racetrack, that’s safe thanks to run-off areas and gravel traps, but on city streets, it could be dangerous. McLaren’s proposed solution is a digital “lock”: GPS detects when the car is on a track, and the system could even recognize temporary circuits if the car repeatedly passes the same points.

For now, this is only a patent, and there’s no guarantee the technology will reach production. Still, McLaren appears to be preparing for potential future regulations that could ban track-specific modes on street cars. In that scenario, geolocation-based unlocking would allow owners to keep the “race-ready” setup safely confined to appropriate environments.

There is a flip side: relying on GPS and internet connectivity introduces potential delays and limits driver freedom. In an era increasingly concerned with digital privacy, such a system could spark controversy, despite the engineers’ safety-driven intentions.

You may also be interested in the news:

Do Speedometers Underreport Your Speed? Myth or Reality
Buick Riviera: American Style at Its Finest
Hidden Messages from Automakers That Are Tucked Inside Car Designs
Demon-Swapped Jeep Trackhawk Joins the Lowrider Scene – Rendering
How a Spark Plug Can Cut Glass When You Don’t Have a Glass Cutter
Which Car Are You Based on Your Zodiac Sign? An Automotive Horoscope
Jeep Wrangler Gets Stuck Off-Trail, Sparks 20-Acre Wildfire in Florida’s Ocala National Forest
Ford Recalls Nearly 1.4 Million F-150 Trucks Over Potential Transmission Defect