Volvo Malaysia reminds Malaysians to buckle up rear seat passengers this Hari Raya season

Volvo Malaysia reminds Malaysians to buckle up rear seat passengers this Hari Raya season

KUALA LUMPUR: During Hari Raya, there is probably no word Malaysians hear more often than selamat. It is everywhere, in family messages, social media captions, brand campaigns and festive greetings passed around all month long.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • What is Volvo Car Malaysia’s Hari Raya campaign about?

    It is a festive safety campaign built around the meaning of the word selamat, encouraging Malaysians to think about protection on the road during balik kampung travel.
  • What road safety issue is Volvo Car Malaysia highlighting?

    The campaign places special focus on rear seat belt use, which remains low in Malaysia despite being mandatory.
  • But Volvo Car Malaysia is trying to shift the meaning of that word back to something more serious this Raya season, especially with the annual balik kampung rush already putting more pressure on roads across the country.

    Photo from Volvo

    Also Read: 2026 Volvo EX30 revealed in China with revised lineup and more standard features

    The carmaker’s latest festive campaign is built around a simple point, selamat is not just a greeting. In Bahasa Malaysia, the word also carries the meaning of being safe and protected, and that feels especially relevant at a time when millions of Malaysians are preparing to travel long distances to reunite with family.

    The Raya journey home is not always as cheerful as the occasion itself. Long hours behind the wheel, packed highways, fatigue, impatience and heavy traffic all turn the festive exodus into one of the most stressful periods of the year on Malaysian roads.

    Volvo says the campaign is meant to remind people that wishing someone selamat Hari Raya should also mean wanting them to arrive safely, not just sending a festive pleasantry out of habit.

    The company is leaning into the digital side of Raya culture to get that message across. Every year, as Hari Raya approaches, social media fills up with greetings, well-wishes and virtual “open house” moments as Malaysians connect with one another online. Volvo Car Malaysia sees that flood of greetings as an opportunity to inject a more meaningful road safety reminder into the conversation.

    Photo from Volvo

    Its approach is to engage directly with festive greetings shared on automotive and road-related social media pages, using the familiar word selamat to nudge people into thinking more seriously about protection on the road.

    The message becomes even more pointed when it comes to passengers in the back seats.

    Volvo Car Malaysia is using this campaign to highlight what remains a badly overlooked safety habit in Malaysia, rear seat belt use. While front occupants wearing seat belts is already second nature for many drivers, rear seat passengers are still far less consistent, even though the law has required it for years.

    That gap matters more than many people realise. In a crash, an unbelted rear passenger is not only at risk themselves, but can also become a danger to others in the car. It only takes one sudden impact for a family trip to turn tragic.

    So rather than making safety sound abstract, Volvo’s campaign keeps it grounded in one practical reminder before anyone heads out for balik kampung, check that every single passenger is buckled up, including those in the second and third rows.

    Photo from Volvo

    It is a message that ties back to Volvo’s own history too. The three-point seat belt, first introduced by Volvo in 1959, remains one of the most important safety innovations in automotive history. But even the best safety system does nothing if people do not use it.

    The broader point of the campaign is that a safe Raya trip is not just about reaching the destination. It is about the small decisions made before the journey even begins, the quiet checks that often go ignored, and the responsibility drivers carry for the people sitting beside them and behind them.

    That is really where Volvo Car Malaysia is trying to place the conversation this festive season. Not on sentiment for sentiment’s sake, but on what protection actually looks like in real life.

    This Raya, selamat is being framed as something more than a greeting. For Volvo Car Malaysia, it is supposed to be a reminder, and ideally, a promise that the people travelling home with you arrive there safely too.

    Also Read: Volvo ES90 Ultra launched in Malaysia, 651 km WLTP range, 350 kW DC charging, RM339,888

    Adam Aubrey

    Adam Aubrey

    Adam Aubrey is an experienced writer and presenter with over a decade in the automotive industry, known for his passion for rebuilding older cars from the golden era of automotive design. His work also delves into the future of vehicles, highlighting the exciting potential of electric propulsion.

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