Vehicle Tracking System Features Can Become a Teen Car Tracker
Many of the new vehicles sold in the last four years come equipped with
different types of devices and services that allow you to track your teen’s driving behavior. Some features include:
- Destination Alerts. Alerts you via text or email when the vehicle arrives at a preset destination (e.g., your child’s school).
- Speed Limits. Limits the vehicle’s top speed. Even if the driver tries to accelerate beyond that speed, this setting will prevent them from doing so.
- Volume Limits. Prevents the driver from increasing the car’s volume above a certain limit. Depending on your device or service, parents may also be able to block explicit radio stations.
- Do-Not-Disturb Mode. Diverts the driver’s incoming phone calls to voicemail and holds all text messages for later viewing.
If you are on the market for a new car, keep in mind that a tracking system may not be included in the make and model you’re interested in. And even if it is, it may not have all the features you’re interested in and may require an additional monthly fee or subscription to activate your car tracking device for parents.
GPS-enabled Tracking Devices
GPS-enabled tracking devices can be plugged into your car’s diagnostic port, which is typically found under the dashboard, by the driver’s left knee.
Consumer Reports found that the three models they tested in 2014 all worked well on vehicles built after 1996. Since that report, many more devices have come on the market, including Zubie, Mastrack, MobiCoPilot, MotoSafety GPS and Delphi Connect. These devices all work the same basic way, although some have a few different bells and whistles.
Each is controlled via a website where you can set geographic driving limits (such as a geofence) for the driver. You can view a map that shows the vehicle’s location and route. If the car crosses a geographic boundary, exceeds a set speed, or breaks any other limit you’ve set, the vehicle tracker, acting as a car tracking device for parents, will send you an e-mail or a text (or both) to notify you. Most also come with a mobile app for use with a smartphone or tablet.
Wondering if your child can just disconnect the device? You’ll receive an alert if they do, or if someone decides to reconnect a disconnected device.