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Tesla Robotaxi

Tesla Robotaxi is a ride-hailing service operated by Tesla, Inc. that utilizes its vehicles equipped with the Full Self-Driving (FSD) software. The service launched in a limited capacity in Austin, Texas, on June 22, 2025.


Column 1
A Tesla Model Y, the initial Tesla vehicle in Robotaxi service.
Tesla, Inc.
United States
June 22, 2025 (2025-06-22)
Autonomous ride-hailing
Commercial transportation, Technology demonstrator
www.tesla.com/robotaxi

Tesla Robotaxi is a ride-hailing service operated by Tesla, Inc. that utilizes its vehicles equipped with the Full Self-Driving (FSD) software. The service launched in a limited capacity in Austin, Texas, on June 22, 2025.

The service represents a key part of Tesla CEO Elon Musk's long-term strategy for the company, which envisions a future where Tesla owners can add their personal vehicles to a shared autonomous ride-hailing network. The initial launch in Austin operates with a human "safety monitor" in the front passenger seat. The service's debut on June 22, 2025, was marked by significant media attention and scrutiny, with early riders documenting incidents such as the vehicle driving on the wrong side of the road, phantom braking, dropping passengers off in intersections and committing traffic violations that drew the attention of federal regulators, such as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to investigate these issues.

The Robotaxi network is eventually expected to work with all current Tesla vehicles, but is currently being focused on the Model Y which makes up the entirety of Teslas Robotaxi Fleet. Tesla is expected to add the Cybercab when it begins volume production in April with the Model 3, Model S, Model X, and Cybertruck expected in the future. During Teslas We, Robot event in October 2024 Tesla also announced the Robovan which is expected to be added to Teslas Robotaxi network when production on the vehicle begins. However, no timelines for production were given at the event.

Tesla first mentioned a future car sharing service for its cars with autonomous control capability in 2016. Musk stated that the car could generate income for the owner while the owner pursued other activities. By 2018, Tesla was more explicit and indicated that the service would compete directly with companies like Uber and Lyft, but with the substantial difference that the Robotaxi Network would be composed exclusively of autonomous electric vehicles. In 2019, Musk said that costs for car owners who allow their vehicles to be part of the Tesla Network would be under 20 cents per mile, much less than the $2–3 per mile of traditional driver-operated ridesharing services.

Tesla revealed on October 23, 2024, during its investor call, that a Tesla ridehailing app has been in internal testing since early 2024, exclusively with Tesla employees in California, using driver-supervised Model 3 and Model Y vehicles.

The concept of a Tesla-operated autonomous ride-hailing network has been a central part of Elon Musk's public narrative for the company for nearly a decade.

  • October 2016: Musk announced that all new Tesla cars were being built with the necessary hardware for "full self-driving capability." He outlined a vision where owners could allow their cars to work as robotaxis when they weren't using them, generating income.
  • April 2019: At Tesla's "Autonomy Day," Musk predicted that Tesla would have one million robotaxis on the road by 2020. He said the vehicles would be "feature-complete on full self-driving" by the end of 2019 and would not require driver oversight by the second quarter of 2020.
  • 2020-2024: During this period, Tesla continued to develop its Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, releasing it as a beta feature to a growing number of customers.
  • August 2024: Tesla unveiled a design for a purpose-built robotaxi, later dubbed the "Cybercab," a futuristic, two-seater vehicle with no steering wheel or pedals. Musk stated it would be cheaper to ride in a Cybercab than to take the bus.
  • June 2025: The service is launched with human safety monitors using modified Tesla Model Y vehicles.
  • January 2026: The service began to integrate unsupervised vehicles into its fleet in a limited manner.
  • April 2026: The service expands to Dallas and Houston in Texas with unsupervised vehicles.

As of December 2025, Tesla has approximately 135 robotaxis in service.

StateMetro areaStatusLaunch dateRef.
ArizonaPhoenixService announced1H 2026
CaliforniaSan Francisco Bay AreaSafety-driver service
FloridaMiamiService announced1H 2026
OrlandoService announced1H 2026
TampaService announced1H 2026
NevadaLas VegasService announced1H 2026
TexasAustinFull commercial serviceNovember 18, 2025
DallasFull commercial serviceApril 18, 2026
HoustonFull commercial serviceApril 18, 2026

The launch of the robotaxi service was met with a polarized reaction. Early riders posted numerous videos to social media praising the experience as "smooth" and "the future."

However, mainstream media coverage and industry analysts were more critical. The focus was often on the numerous documented driving errors, the long-delayed launch, and the gap between Musk's promises of full autonomy and the reality of a service requiring human oversight. Many outlets discussed concerns surrounding public deployment of the technology.

Videos of the robotaxis' performance issues that circulated online caught the attention of U.S. federal regulators. On June 23, 2025, one day after the service launched, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said, "NHTSA is aware of the referenced incidents and is in contact with the manufacturer to gather additional information."

The robotaxi service competes in its market with the older competitor Waymo, and it uses different vision systems on its cabs. While Waymo and other competitors utilize lidar, Tesla robotaxi services use eight cameras paired with artificial intelligence to navigate. Being newer to the robotaxi market, the Tesla service only offers rides in few areas. Waymo, in contrast, gives a much larger amount of rides per day, in less limited operational zones.

Concept model of the Cybercab in 2024

In January 2026 Tesla stated plans to expand to 7 additional cities in the first half of 2026.

The company also plans to begin volume production of its purpose-built Cybercab in April 2026.

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