Some people love the look and "out there" design of an old sports car but feel that regulators have been too draconian in "banning" things like pop-up headlights. They may feel particularly aggrieved because those regulators don’t seem to be doing anything about the size of pickups and SUVs. Those blunt-edged big guys must represent more of a threat to pedestrians than any pop-up headlight-equipped car and the disparity seems particularly unfair if safeguarding pedestrians is the name of the game.However, this story is not quite so straightforward, as regulators did not simply ban headlights in the US under one specific pedestrian safety rule. The reality is that those headlights gradually disappeared for a variety of reasons. And lawmakers have only started to focus on pick-ups and SUVs in recent times, looking specifically at hood heights and front-end shapes. Pop-Up Headlights Disappeared While Tall Trucks Stayed Legal Bring a TrailerPop-up headlights gradually disappeared because the engineering case for them collapsed. Steady improvements in fixed headlamp technology made retractable units very hard to justify at the accounting stage, especially as lighting regulations became more complex. Meanwhile, giant pickups and SUVs became more dominant across the land, with their hulking presence, flatter front face, and challenging presence. And regulators have been slow to act from a pedestrian protection point of view, never really turning their attention to the shape of these vehicles.Still, the reality is that pop-up headlights existed mainly due to old US lighting rules. The NHTSA rule FMVSS 108 insisted that headlamps should be located between 22 and 54 inches above the road surface, and so pop-up headlights became an elegant workaround for low-slung sports car designers. This type of design would allow cars like the C5 Corvette to keep its nose sleek with the lights tucked away, with those lamps only rising into a legal position when they were switched on.As time went by, fixed headlamp technology became simpler and manufacturers were able to create smaller, brighter, and better-packaged solutions. Those technological developments tended to remove the rationale for movable units altogether. And while this was going on, regulators never enforced any rules to say that a pickup's hood could not be too upright or too high. Those vehicles continued to rule the roads with fewer restrictions, while pop-ups gradually vanished from the automotive scene for a variety of reasons. Pop-Ups Faded Because They Weren't Worth The Engineering Pain Mazda By the late 1990s and early 2000s, retractable headlamps were more bother than they were worth to most manufacturers. Yes, they could certainly deliver drama from a design perspective and even define the whole identity of certain vehicles, but the flip side was that they were mechanically complex, heavy, and expensive to package. Increasingly, they didn't fit in with the approach to modern front-end engineering and were also less compatible with directional lighting.Mazda replaced “heavy” pop-ups in its second-generation MX-5, the NB, realizing that this approach was no longer the smart answer to the problem it once solved. Outside the United States, specific rules started to come into play, which also pushed pop-up headlamps toward the exit. In Europe in particular, pedestrian protection rules were quite critical of components that could change their shape or position, and pop-up headlights came under the spotlight.Countries in Europe then introduced pedestrian protection regulations in 2003, with new passenger car types having to comply from 2005 onward. So, when manufacturers continued to consider the strategic case for pop-up headlamps alongside these new rules and directives, moving lamp hardware became even less attractive. Modern Pickups And SUVs Are A Much Bigger Problem Roush Performance There seems little doubt that modern tall-fronted trucks and SUVs could pose a much bigger problem for the average pedestrian than a protruding light structure. In fact, IIHS research from 2023 found that vehicles with hood leading edges higher than 40 in and a grille sloped at 65 degrees were about 45% more likely to cause pedestrian fatalities than vehicles with hood heights lower than 30 in, or those with sloped front ends. Medium-height vehicles with blunt front ends were also 26% more likely to kill a pedestrian, clearly underlining the scale of the problem.Apparently, it's not the actual mass or size of the vehicle that's the issue, but rather the way a tall, upright front end can strike the human body higher and send more force into the torso or head region. Lower-slung vehicles might simply impact the person in the leg region and cause that unfortunate individual to wrap onto the hood.Further research came out in December 2024 when the IIHS said that taller front ends could cause serious pedestrian injuries at low speeds. In other words, the vehicle speed itself was not the overriding factor, and what still mattered in the big scheme was front-end height, which could change the injury threshold.IIHS research also discovered in June 2025 that the forward blind zones of six top-selling passenger vehicles were now much greater than they had been over the prior 25 years. The IIHS felt that larger blind zones and longer "nearest visible point" distances were becoming significant factors in turning crashes. So, a tall hood is not just more dangerous when it comes into contact with someone, but it also makes it harder for a driver to see a pedestrian in the periphery. Contradiction Exists Because Regulations Evolved Unevenly Lexus Rules and basic common sense suggest that to reduce the risk to pedestrians, drivers must be able to see as clearly as possible at night and be able to maneuver without hitting anything. It’s perfectly fair to expect regulators to focus on these areas and make sure that manufacturers design their vehicles with safety front and center.But still, lighting seems to have been a far more tightly controlled area of vehicle design. Regulators have long specified mounting heights, beam performance, lamp location, and other details that are relatively easy to define and test. Pop-up headlights live directly inside that world, so they were always likely to come under pressure once regulations evolved and engineering matured.In favor of pop-up headlights, you could also argue that the size, shape, and general design of big vehicles would be more important, from a pedestrian protection perspective. However, pedestrian protection seems to have been an issue that has lagged in the US, with the NHTSA only coming out with a new pedestrian head protection standard as recently as September 2024. At the time, the agency said pedestrian fatalities were 57% higher in 2022 compared to 2013. And it proposed a new regulation to establish pedestrian head impact protection for vehicles with a GVWR of 10,000 lb. or less, including light trucks such as SUVs and pickups.A May 2024 rule also requires light vehicles to have automatic emergency braking systems that can detect and react to an imminent crash with either a vehicle ahead or a pedestrian. That may be an overdue ruling, but it also illustrates a broader pattern. It suggests that a regulator's response to pedestrian harm might lean more toward crash avoidance technology than front-end geometry design. Designers Have Ways To Revive The Pop-Up Fantasy Ferrari Some manufacturers refuse to let go of the idea of pop-up headlights, and some have created concepts that meet modern regulations and use modern hardware. For example, Ferrari's Daytona SP3 has headlights partially hidden by movable eyelids, a cute but probably expensive design feature that can still give the SP3 some of that old theater without a full flip-up assembly. Hyundai may be trying to make the same point with its N Vision 74 plans and, in doing so, pay homage to the 1974 Pony Coupe. The newbie could feature a retro-futuristic approach based around parametric pixel lighting and this would certainly be a very contemporary interpretation of the original idea.In summary, pop-up headlights did not disappear because regulators singled them out. They faded away because improved fixed lighting packaging realities and evolving safety expectations made them largely unnecessary. And when it came to trucks and SUVs in particular, US regulators took a lot longer to address the threat to pedestrians posed by tall, blunt front ends. It seems that regulators may have needed to wait until the data grew to such an extent that the bulk issue was impossible to ignore. And while the headlamp problem was easier to solve or may have just disappeared by itself, the general pickup truck and SUV design "issue" took a lot more time to mature.