Autoliv’s latest patent reveals a body-enveloping motorcycle airbag designed to increase rider protection, expanding coverage beyond frontal impacts for scooters, cruisers, and touring bikes.

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Motorcycle safety is getting a new layer of protection, and it’s coming in the form of an evolving airbag system. While we were first introduced to the concept back in 2023 with Autoliv, the company is still fine-tuning its technology, even if the 2025 production rollout looks like it might be delayed.
The latest patent from Autoliv reveals a big step forward: a body-enveloping airbag that increases coverage around the rider, protecting more than just the torso from a frontal impact. Unlike earlier “wall-like” airbags that formed a simple vertical barrier, the new design uses upper and lower chambers housed in a single casing.

Straps keep the system in place, and clever cut-outs ensure the rider’s arms remain free to control the bike. Essentially, it’s a wearable cocoon of protection that inflates before impact, absorbing forces and reducing the risk of injury.
Much like a car airbag, sensors detect a crash, trigger rapid inflation, and then gradually deflate to cushion the rider. Honda’s Gold Wing has been doing something similar for two decades, but Autoliv’s new approach expands the coverage and adapts better to upright riders on scooters, cruisers, and touring bikes. Sportbikes, with their forward-leaning position, remain a tougher challenge due to space and speed requirements for inflation.

So why haven’t airbags become standard on motorcycles? Cost and rider demand are likely the culprits. Paying extra for a safety feature you hope never to use isn’t always appealing. But history shows that once a safety tech proves its worth, think ABS, riders eventually embrace it. Autoliv’s continued development suggests that on-bike airbags could follow a similar path, slowly moving from optional gadget to expected safety feature.
For now, the tech exists, the ideas are patent-protected, and the prototypes are getting smarter. The real question is whether manufacturers will have the courage to make airbags a common sight on our streets. And if they do, riders may soon have a lot more padding between themselves and the asphalt.



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