President Trump signed a presidential memorandum that aims to give Americans more control over vehicle repairs, loosen stringent emissions-related restrictions, and challenge a regulatory chokehold that has driven up costs for car owners and after-market parts makers.
The memo tackles a surprisingly common problem: ordinary people running into government red tape just for trying to fix their own cars. Officials and regulators had made it harder and more expensive for people to buy affordable parts or perform repairs without triggering emissions enforcement headaches. The new action pushes federal policy toward letting owners maintain and repair their property without needless interference.
The president made the point bluntly at the signing. “It came to my attention because I noticed they were arresting people for fixing their car. … That’s not even believable,” Trump before he signed the memorandum. After putting pen to paper he added, “We rule by common sense, to a large extent.”
At the heart of the memo is a clear policy: consumers should be free to fix what they own with lawful, affordable parts. The administration calls out the way emissions-control rules have been applied to block cost-effective repairs and after-market solutions. Moving federal policy in this direction should lower repair bills and give small parts suppliers room to compete.
One major target of the change is the de facto dominance of a single state standard that effectively sets the rules for the whole country. For years California’s certification framework has been the only path recognized under federal law for many after-market parts, and that bottleneck has raised prices and delayed basic fixes. The memorandum pushes back on that monopoly by instructing federal agencies to adopt more flexible, consumer-friendly approaches.
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EPA leadership is on board and has framed the memo as a win for everyday Americans. “If you own it, you should have the freedom to fix it!” Zeldin on X. “President Trump just signed a new Presidential Memo protecting Americans’ freedom to fix their own vehicle if they so desire. The President’s action also combats cheap foreign aftermarket vehicle parts while also breaking up the monopoly the California Air Resources Board has had over certifying aftermarket parts.”
The administration says the move will bring clarity to manufacturers and repair shops that have been stuck in regulatory limbo. By loosening overly rigid certification rules, the government intends to encourage competition among parts suppliers and make it easier for car owners to choose cost-effective, safe options. That competition should undercut inflated prices and give independent mechanics a fair shot.
Critics will say emissions standards are sacrosanct, but the memo does not abandon environmental concerns; it aims to balance clean air with common sense. The goal is to prevent a single state’s procedures from dictating national outcomes when those procedures add cost without improving environmental results. Practical solutions that protect air quality and let people fix their own property are the point.
Expect a period of rule adjustments as agencies translate the memo into guidance and enforcement changes. That transition will matter: clear rules that protect consumers and foster competition are what make this effective, not just the announcement. If implemented quickly and sensibly, the policy could ease household budgets and strengthen the aftermarket parts market while reining in bureaucratic overreach.
The memo also sends a message about federal priorities: reduce unnecessary federal and state friction, empower owners, and support American businesses that make and sell parts. For anyone tired of paying premiums for routine repairs or waiting months for approvals, this is a practical step toward restoring control. The administration is betting that returning common sense to regulation will deliver real, everyday benefits to motorists and independent shops alike.

