The Announcement: Autel Joins the NASTF SDRM Ecosystem
On July 1, 2026, Autel U.S. dropped a press release that every automotive locksmith and independent shop performing key programming needs to read. The company announced the phased integration of National Automotive Service Task Force (NASTF) Secure Data Release Model (SDRM) validation protocols into its key and immobilizer programming tools. The rollout begins in Q3 2026 with the Autel KM100 platform, with additional tools to follow in subsequent phases.
This announcement lands less than two weeks after TOPDON declared its own NASTF SDRM support — and the pattern is unmistakable. The automotive aftermarket is moving, with increasing speed, toward a standardized vehicle security credentialing system. If your shop still treats key programming as a purely technical skill without a compliance dimension, the second half of 2026 is going to reshape your workflow.
Why NASTF SDRM Matters for Key Programming
The Secure Data Release Model is NASTF's framework for controlling access to security-sensitive vehicle data and functions. Under SDRM, a technician must be a registered NASTF Vehicle Security Professional (VSP) and pass an identity verification process before accessing functions like key code retrieval, immobilizer PIN release, and security gateway authentication.
This isn't a theoretical framework anymore. In 2025, several OEMs began requiring SDRM validation for key-related operations on late-model vehicles. By mid-2026, the list of participating manufacturers includes Ford, GM, Stellantis, Toyota, Honda, and Hyundai/KIA — essentially every major brand that independent shops encounter daily.
For a locksmith using an auto key programmer, SDRM means that the days of plugging in a tool and programming a key with no identity verification are numbered. The tool itself will now enforce the credential check. If the technician isn't a validated VSP, the function simply will not execute.

Autel's Phased Rollout: What to Expect
Autel is taking a deliberate, phased approach. Here is the confirmed timeline:
- Phase 1 — Q3 2026: KM100 platform receives SDRM protocol integration first. The KM100 is Autel's dedicated handheld key programming tool, widely used by mobile locksmiths for its portability and broad vehicle coverage.
- Phase 2 and beyond: Additional immobilizer and key programming tools in the Autel lineup — including the IM508S, IM608 Pro, and IM608 Pro II — will follow. Autel has not yet published a specific schedule for these models.
This sequencing makes operational sense. Starting with the KM100, a focused key-programming device with a narrower feature set, lets Autel validate the integration in the field before extending it to the full-diagnostic-tablet platforms like the IM608 Pro II that combine diagnostic scanning with advanced immobilizer work.
Autel U.S. CEO Chloe Hung addressed the locksmith community directly in the announcement: "Autel understands the critical role that licensed locksmiths, Vehicle Security Professionals, and repair technicians play in keeping consumers on the road. Throughout this process, we have carefully considered the operational realities faced by legitimate users and worked hard to ensure this integration is as seamless and practical as possible."

What Locksmiths Need to Do Right Now
If you run a mobile locksmith business or an auto locksmith shop that relies on Autel tools for key programming, here are the concrete action items:
1. Register as a NASTF VSP — Today
The VSP application process is not instant. It involves identity verification, background screening, and proof of legitimate business operation. If you wait until your Autel tool prompts you for SDRM credentials on a customer's vehicle, you will be turning away revenue. Start the registration at NASTF.org now. The process typically takes 2-4 weeks.
2. Audit Your Tool Inventory
Check which Autel key programming tools are in your fleet. If you own a KM100, the Q3 2026 update is coming soon — make sure your subscription is active so you receive the firmware update that enables SDRM. Users of the IM508S and IM608 Pro series should monitor Autel's update announcements for their phase timing.
3. Budget for Compliance Costs
NASTF VSP registration carries an annual fee, and some OEMs charge per-transaction fees for SDRM-mediated key code retrieval. Factor these into your pricing for 2026 and beyond. The cost is real, but so is the alternative — being unable to program keys on late-model vehicles at all.
4. Train Your Team
The SDRM workflow adds steps: log in, authenticate, request secure data, receive it, then proceed with programming. Technicians accustomed to the older "plug and program" flow will need hands-on practice. Build this into your Q3 training schedule.

The Bigger Picture: SDRM Is Becoming the Industry Standard
With Autel joining TOPDON in the NASTF SDRM ecosystem, the writing is on the wall for the entire automotive key programming industry. The two largest aftermarket diagnostic tool manufacturers have now committed to SDRM integration. Other brands — Launch, Xhorse, OBDSTAR, XTOOL — have not yet announced formal SDRM support, but competitive pressure and OEM requirements make it increasingly likely that they will follow.
This consolidation around NASTF SDRM has a significant upside for legitimate shops: it raises the barrier to entry for unlicensed operators and reduces the risk of tools being used for vehicle theft. "Vehicle theft is a complex and evolving issue that requires cooperation across the entire industry," Hung noted. "Autel is committed to being part of that solution while continuing to support the hardworking professionals who depend on our products every day."
For shops that invest in Autel diagnostic scanners and key programmers, SDRM integration is actually a competitive advantage. When every legitimate shop operates within the same verified ecosystem, the market differentiator shifts from "can you program this key?" to "how efficiently and professionally can you serve the customer?"

What About Non-Autel Users?
If your shop uses non-Autel key programming tools — Launch X-PROG series, Xhorse VVDI2, OBDSTAR X300 DP Plus, or similar — the Autel announcement should serve as an early warning. These brands will almost certainly need to implement SDRM or equivalent validation protocols to maintain access to security functions on 2027+ model year vehicles.
In the meantime, diversifying your key programming toolkit — including having at least one SDRM-capable platform — is a prudent strategy. Many shops run multiple brands of key and remote programming equipment precisely to handle edge cases where one tool covers a vehicle that another does not. Adding SDRM readiness to your tool selection criteria is the logical next step.
Bottom Line
Autel's NASTF SDRM integration announcement is not a surprise — it is the confirmation of a trend that has been building for two years. The KM100 rollout in Q3 2026 is the first concrete implementation milestone. For locksmiths and repair shops, the message is clear: vehicle security credentialing is no longer optional, and the tools you use every day are about to enforce that reality.
The shops that act now — registering as VSPs, updating their tools, training their teams — will be the ones still programming keys without interruption when 2027 model year vehicles start rolling into the bay. Everyone else will be making phone calls they should have made in July 2026.