Mercedes is about to make its cushy electric flagship feel a lot more like a gadget — and a slightly futuristic one at that. With the refreshed EQS sedan, the company is rolling out full steer-by-wire tech and an optional yoke-style “wheel,” a combo that could quietly redefine how luxury cars drive while also poking the internet’s favorite hornet’s nest: weird steering.
At its core, steer-by-wire does exactly what it says on the tin: instead of a physical shaft mechanically linking the steering wheel to the front axle, the system sends your inputs as electrical signals to servos and actuators that turn the wheels. This approach is old news in aviation and high‑end industrial equipment, but in road cars it’s still rare territory, with previous experiments from Infiniti, Lexus, Tesla’s Cybertruck and Nio’s ET9 all helping normalize the idea that your steering “feel” can be simulated instead of being directly mechanical. Mercedes will be the first German automaker to put a true steer-by-wire setup into a production car when it lands in the updated EQS, which is being positioned as the launchpad for the brand’s next wave of software‑heavy tech.
On paper, the upsides are exactly what you’d expect from a car company that loves to talk about “comfort” and “effortlessness.” Because there’s no fixed mechanical ratio to worry about, the steering can be super light and quick in parking lots and tighter at highway speeds, all tuned entirely in software. Turn the yoke a relatively small amount at low speed and the front wheels can swing dramatically, making big sedans like the EQS feel unexpectedly nimble in city traffic and parking garages, especially when paired with the car’s rear-axle steering. At higher speeds, the same system can dial back how aggressively the wheels respond, aiming for that calm, stable, “big Mercedes” vibe on long highway stretches.
To get regulators — and customers — on board, Mercedes is throwing serious engineering at the safety side. The company says the system has already logged more than a million test kilometers (over 621,000 miles) across test benches, proving grounds, and public roads, including on the refreshed EQS prototypes. Under the skin, there are two separate signal paths and redundant control electronics, so if one circuit hiccups, the other keeps the steering alive and the car drops into a sort of limp mode rather than giving up control. In the extremely unlikely event that both channels fail, the EQS can still use its rear‑axle steering and selective braking via ESP to keep the car pointed where the driver intends long enough to get safely stopped or out of a tunnel.
For anyone nervous about being an early adopter, Mercedes isn’t ripping out the old‑school hardware completely; buyers will still be able to spec a traditional electromechanical steering setup if they’d rather stick with what they know. That’s a pragmatic move, especially given how loud the backlash has been around some rival systems, like Tesla’s first‑generation yoke in the Model S, which drew complaints over low‑speed maneuvering and basic tasks like hand‑over‑hand turns. By keeping a conventional option on the menu, Mercedes can let the tech‑curious try steer-by-wire without forcing everyone into a new steering religion on day one.
Of course, the thing grabbing all the attention isn’t the invisible electronics but the yoke bolted on top of them. Instead of a classic round wheel, the EQS can be fitted with a flattened, compact yoke reminiscent of a race car or a plane cockpit, with integrated controls and a newly developed airbag designed for its unusual shape. Mercedes argues that chopping off the top of the wheel gives drivers a cleaner view of the instrument cluster and makes it easier to slide in and out of the seat, a small quality‑of‑life upgrade that actually matters if you live with the car every day. It also opens up the design of the dashboard, since the company is no longer constrained by the need to make space around a big circular rim swinging up and down.
If this is giving you flashbacks to other yoke experiments, you’re not alone. Tesla, Lexus, and Toyota have all tried to make yokes happen in recent years, only to run into a wall of owner complaints and safety questions that pushed some brands to quietly walk back the most aggressive designs. Mercedes is hoping its tighter integration between steer-by-wire and yoke will avoid those pitfalls by making the ratio so adaptive that you rarely need to spin the wheel hand‑over‑hand in the first place. Early media drives have been surprisingly kind: The Drive called it a “steering yoke that actually works,” while InsideEVs went even further, describing the steer-by-wire setup as possibly the best implementation on the market right now, though they were more restrained about the yoke itself.
Behind the scenes, a control unit known as a steering feel unit is doing a lot of heavy lifting, constantly calculating how the steering should feel based on tire loads, speed, and drive mode, then recreating that through electric motors and feedback in the yoke. Because the system is fully decoupled, Mercedes can give different models their own “steering personalities” purely in software, from relaxed and floaty in comfort mode to sharper and more direct in sport settings, without changing any physical hardware. It also means the system can, at least in theory, adapt over time — either via over‑the‑air updates or by letting drivers choose from multiple steering profiles, much like they already do with throttle response and suspension settings.
Context matters here, because the EQS has had a bit of an identity crisis since launch. It’s ultra‑quiet, packed with tech, and objectively comfortable, but enthusiasts have tended to describe it as more “high‑end appliance” than “driver’s car,” especially when compared with the latest S-Class or rivals from BMW and Porsche. Steer-by-wire gives Mercedes a new lever to pull: dial in sharper, more immediate responses around town and on twisty roads to make the EQS feel more alert, then lean into the serene isolation on long motorway runs, all without sacrificing the brand’s traditional focus on refinement.
For the broader industry, this feels like a bit of a tipping point. As cars become rolling computers with huge displays, advanced driver‑assist systems, and constant software updates, decoupling core driving controls from mechanical linkages is almost inevitable: it simplifies packaging, plays nicely with autonomous tech, and makes it easier to build different variants on the same platform. If Mercedes can convince its very conservative, very vocal customer base that steer-by-wire and a yoke belong in a six‑figure luxury sedan, it opens the door for the tech to trickle down into more mainstream models over the next few years.
The open question is whether drivers will actually want it. For many people, the steering wheel is one of the last pieces of a car that still feels purely analog, and replacing that with a chunk of software‑mediated hardware will always trigger some skepticism, no matter how many test miles and redundant circuits the engineers point to. But the first wave of hands‑on impressions suggests that in the EQS, at least, the tech fades into the background in daily use — the yoke looks wild, yet the car reportedly just feels easier to place, more maneuverable in tight spaces, and more composed at speed, which are exactly the sort of everyday benefits that tend to win people over with time.
So yes, Mercedes is adding a steer-by-wire system and a dang steering yoke to its electric flagship, and on the surface, that sounds like a risky, headline‑chasing move. But under all the drama, this is a calculated, deeply engineered push toward a future where steering is just another configurable software layer — one that can be tuned, updated, and personalized like any other feature in your car. If that future starts in the EQS and quietly becomes normal over the next product cycle or two, this moment may end up looking less like a gimmick and more like the point where the traditional steering wheel started to feel just a little bit old‑fashioned.
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