Tesla Begins Unsupervised Robotaxi Service
After years of promises from CEO Elon Musk, Tesla has finally launched Robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, without a human safety monitor. The move marks a major milestone for the company’s long-standing goal of offering fully autonomous rides to the public.
Musk confirmed the rollout on X, stating, “Just started Tesla Robotaxi drives in Austin with no safety monitor in the car. Congrats to the @Tesla_AI team!” Previously, Tesla required monitors in the passenger seat during the service’s initial launch in June 2025. In contrast, the California Bay Area fleet still uses safety drivers behind the wheel. Videos shared online suggest that Tesla may have also deployed a chase car to follow the autonomous taxis for safety oversight.

Milestone After Years of Delays
Tesla’s entry into unsupervised rides comes several years later than Musk’s initial predictions. He had once stated that 1 million robotaxis would be in operation by 2020, a target that was missed. Nevertheless, this development is significant, representing a decade-long push to bring self-driving technology to everyday users.
The next key challenge is scaling the service safely and expanding to other locations. Tesla plans to produce steering wheel-free Cybercabs starting in April, which will help increase the Robotaxi fleet. Ashok Elluswamy, head of Tesla’s autonomous vehicle program, emphasized a gradual rollout:
“Starting with a few unsupervised vehicles mixed in with the broader robotaxi fleet with safety monitors, and the ratio will increase over time.”
He also confirmed that these rides are now available to the public.
Competition With Waymo
Tesla will need to act quickly to compete with the U.S. leader in autonomous driving: Alphabet’s Waymo. While Tesla relies on a camera-only system, Waymo uses multiple sensors including lidar and radar. Waymo currently provides approximately 450,000 paid autonomous rides per week across six cities, expanding into at least 20 additional metro areas this year.
This comparison highlights the challenges Tesla faces. While it has made significant strides in software, the camera-only approach may limit the speed and safety of scaling nationwide.

Looking Ahead
A key question remains: when will full self-driving technology become widely accessible to Tesla owners? Musk has indicated that the Austin Model Y Robotaxis run a more advanced version of the Full Self-Driving software. However, these vehicles are mechanically identical to customer cars, meaning the technology could eventually be offered to anyone who owns a Tesla.
Achieving this would be Tesla’s greatest milestone yet—providing fully autonomous rides on the same platform as personal vehicles, available wherever Tesla owners drive. For now, Austin passengers are getting the first glimpse of monitor-free, publicly available Robotaxi service, signaling a major step forward in Tesla’s vision for self-driving transportation.
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