Driving Etiquette from Ford and The Emily Post Institute

2025 VW Taos Driving View
Credit: Natalie Merola

Tips on how to reduce road rage, just in time for the holidays.

Holiday driving can be a time of family togetherness – but that togetherness can turn toxic if you are stuck with a squabbling family and terrible traffic. Ford Motor Company and and The Emily Post Institute worked together to develop holiday travel etiquette tips to reduce road rage and keep family strife to a minimum.

Daniel Post Senning, the great-great-grandson of Emily Post offers ways for drivers  – and their passengers – to improve their time in their vehicles.

Emily Post Holiday Driving Etiquette Tips

Drivers are hosts: you wouldn’t invite family and friends to your home without planning for their comfort and entertainment, so why get behind the wheel without thinking through the drive?

Communication is key in relationships, both on and off the road

Effective preparation goes hand-in-hand with clear communication – between driver, passengers and their vehicles.

New technology means new manners

Keeping everyone plugged in and powered up keeps road trippers happy; my family in a Ford Explorer

In 1949, when Emily Post first wrote about automotive etiquette, the car was the technological innovation. In today’s technology landscape, cars come with growing app libraries of their own – and just like smartphones, nearly everyone can use a reminder on their polite use. Make sure in-car innovations serve to enhance, not hinder, your enjoyment of holiday travel.

Judy Antell, who is TravelingMom.com's Free in 50 States editor, lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn, with her husband and ... More about Judy Antell
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