In their garage in a suburb north of Stockholm, filled with Audis and BMWs, they do about five to six conversions a month. "You can find A-traktors from 30,000 kronor ($2,900) to 200,000 kronor," Flyman said, adding that if you already have a car, a typical conversion costs around 25,000 kronor. Oskar Flyman, 21, and his younger brother started a business in 2021 converting cars into A-traktors. The number of injuries has exceeded 200 per year and there were four deaths in 2022 alone.įor others, the surge has become a business opportunity. "When I went into town at first, everyone would pull out their phones and film me," the teenager told AFP.įollowing the surge in new registrations since 2020, insurers and police have expressed alarm at the more than fivefold increase in accidents involving A-traktors in five years. The motto "Queen of the Road" is emblazoned on the front and "Go with style" on the back. The teen has adorned the refurbished truck with a gleaming red-and-blue paint job and lots of headlights. In the western Swedish town of Karlstad, 17-year-old Ronja Lofgren regularly turns heads with her 5.5-tonne Scania Vabis truck from 1964, which her father saved from the scrap heap. It is also the focus of a growing subculture focused on customised cars and a new music genre hugely popular in Sweden called "EPA Dunk". Sweden looks set however for a battle with the EU - the European Commission criticised the system in early March, and proposed that a simplified permit become mandatory.įor many rural teenagers, the A-traktor symbolises their dream of independence. Only in 2018 did authorities introduce mandatory road worthiness testing for the vehicles. The state formalised the use of A-traktors with a 1963 regulation, which has been closely guarded for decades in rural Sweden. In the 1950s, as the economy prospered, real tractors became more common and the need for these homestyled vehicles began to subside.īut in the countryside, young people without a licence were happy to use them to get around, especially in areas without much public transport. To encourage the construction of cheap vehicles when tractors were still out of reach for farmers, the government allowed them to cobble together simple cars. The predecessors to today's A-traktors originated during the 1930s Depression, when there was a shortage of agricultural equipment. Originally the domain of youths in rural areas, city kids have increasingly been getting wheels of their own, with the number of registered A-traktors doubling to 50,000 in just two and a half years, in a country of 10.3 million inhabitants. The system was relaxed even further in mid-2020, when it became possible to cap cars' top speed electronically, making it much easier to modify a modern car. The system is surprisingly lenient in a country known for championing road safety - the three-point seatbelt is a Swedish invention - and for its strict drink driving rules. The back seat must also be removed, so they can carry only the driver and one passenger.Īll that is required is a simple moped licence, available from the age of 15, or a tractor licence, from 16. "I usually use it when I go to school or meet up with friends," Evelina says.Ī triangular warning sign in the back indicating a slow-moving vehicle and a hitch ball for trailers are both mandatory for an "A-traktor". In Stockholm's wealthy suburbs, young kids are regularly seen driving Porsche Cayennes on their own. While teenagers elsewhere have to make do with a moped or scooter until they get a driver's licence, young Swedes can use almost any vehicle that has its top speed capped. The gift was a special reward for her achievements in school. "I got it a year ago, in April, for my birthday," Evelina tells AFP proudly in front of her dark blue 5-series BMW in the driveway of her family's home in a southern Stockholm suburb.
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