When using adaptive cruise control, your vehicle will try to maintain your set target speed, as well as your set distance to other vehicles. You can adjust both your target speed and general distance to vehicles ahead using the steering wheel controls.
You can set adaptive cruise control as your default assisted driving feature in settings. This allows you to activate it with the Pilot Assist button on the steering wheel.
While driving, you can switch between Pilot Assist and adaptive cruise control using the switch button on the control panel on the left side of the steering wheel.
![]() | Adaptive cruise control is active. |
![]() | Adaptive cruise control is active and adapting your driving speed to a vehicle ahead. |
Conditions and limitations
While Pilot Assist can also provide steering assistance, adaptive cruise control cannot. However, you can still get steering interventions from features such as lane keeping aid or in situations causing steering interventions. Conditions and limitations relating to detection capabilities, distance keeping and speed keeping are shared between Pilot Assist and adaptive cruise control. The Pilot Assist conditions and limitations related to steering assistance do not apply to adaptive cruise control because the sub-feature does not provide any steering assistance.