Brazilian drivers are increasingly vocal about the gulf between automotive marketing and everyday usefulness. As manufacturers load new models with connectivity and digital features, many buyers find themselves with functions that look good on the specification sheet but rarely improve daily driving.
Why these useless car features frustrate drivers
The complaint centres on what could be called “useless car features”: technologies that duplicate existing systems, fail under normal conditions or are inappropriate for the vehicle’s intended use. Consumers say these features add complexity without clear benefit and can even reduce satisfaction.
Examples are common. Several manufacturers now offer multimedia centres that permit video streaming and gaming, capabilities that can distract drivers and serve little practical purpose. Roof racks on compact SUVs often exist for appearance rather than payload, incapable of supporting significant loads without extra accessories. Likewise, production SUVs and pickups fitted with 4×4 systems frequently leave dealers fitting only urban tyres, undermining any off-road promise.
Practical flaws and false promises
Redundancy is a recurring problem. Parking sensors remain fitted in many models despite rear cameras and 360-degree vision systems. The overlap creates noisy, conflicting alerts rather than helping drivers. Gesture controls and touch-sensitive steering-wheel buttons aim to modernise cabins but often demand concentration and fine motor skills, increasing distraction rather than reducing it. Voice assistants, once heralded as a solution for hands-free operation, still misinterpret commands or struggle with regional accents, so motorists abandon them.
Other features provoke consumer irritation for being worse than the technology they replace. Systems that centralise almost every control in a touchscreen can trigger driver distraction warnings for the very interface designers create. Keycards or proximity systems that require precise placement can be less convenient than traditional physical keys. And the emergence of paywalled vehicle functions—features built into the car but locked behind subscription fees—has caused particular resentment.
What owners and manufacturers should do
J.D. Power’s Tech Experience Index Study 2024, which surveyed more than 80,000 new vehicle owners worldwide, found that unintuitive features, low-use functions and unnecessary learning curves all lower overall satisfaction. The message to automakers is clear: prioritise useful, reliable systems over headline-grabbing but impractical novelties.
For buyers, the remedy is straightforward. Test every feature during a trial drive, pay attention to the type of tyres and basic hardware fitted to the vehicle, and check whether promised functions require additional accessories or subscriptions. For regulators and industry bodies, clearer labelling and consumer information could curb the trend of adding non-essential kit simply to fill specification lists.
Ultimately, the debate over useless car features in Brazil reflects a broader global concern about the balance between innovation and utility. Manufacturers that focus on ergonomics, real-world performance and transparent pricing are likely to see stronger owner satisfaction—and fewer complaints about shiny but impractical equipment.
Key Takeaways:
- Many modern cars in Brazil ship with technology that adds little practical value, from decorative roof racks to subscription-based features.
- Redundancies such as parking sensors alongside 360° camera systems and urban tyres on 4×4 SUVs undermine real-world utility.
- A global J.D. Power study shows poorly designed, low-use features reduce owner satisfaction—manufacturers should prioritise usability.

















