Qualcomm Technologies and Valeo are expanding their collaboration in advanced driver assistance and automated driving. The two companies are introducing a platform that combines Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Ride system-on-chips and software with Valeo’s sensors, parking algorithms, ECUs, and system integration.
Platform Overview
The system is described as production-ready and pre-integrated, including sensors, compute units, and applications for automated parking, driver and occupant monitoring, and assisted driving. Safety remains a focus, with the design aimed at meeting NCAP 5-star standards. Valeo’s role is to provide system-level expertise and validation, while Qualcomm contributes silicon and a software stack built around Snapdragon Ride.
A key element is the Snapdragon Ride Flex SoC, which can host both ADAS and infotainment workloads. Automakers are pushing to consolidate vehicle compute, and running safety and infotainment on a single chip is one way of reducing hardware complexity.
Executive Commentary
Nakul Duggal, who leads automotive and industrial at Qualcomm, said the goal of the collaboration is to help OEMs shorten their development cycles. He noted that combining Snapdragon Ride with Valeo’s sensor and integration expertise allows automakers to bring new driver assistance features to market more quickly and efficiently.
Marc Vrecko, head of Valeo Brain, pointed to the importance of offering a complete package. He described the joint platform as a flexible, future-ready system that integrates hardware, software, and validation into a single solution for automakers.
Why It Matters
Automakers are under pressure to scale ADAS features while shifting toward software-defined vehicles. Building everything in-house takes time and resources. By offering a validated platform, Qualcomm and Valeo are positioning themselves as partners who can provide a foundation that works across entry-level ADAS as well as centralized compute systems for high-end models.
Applications
The companies are targeting: Assisted and automated driving functions Automated and remote parking Driver and occupant monitoring Software-defined vehicles with combined ADAS and infotainment
Perspective
The announcement fits into a larger industry trend. OEMs increasingly want pre-validated systems instead of piecing together hardware and software from multiple suppliers. By combining Qualcomm’s compute platforms with Valeo’s sensor technologies and validation capabilities, the companies are aiming to give automakers a clearer path to deploying next-generation safety and convenience features.
Read the announcement here.