Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Tesla Robotaxi fleet in Texas less than one-tenth size of Waymo's, filings reveal

read original get Tesla Robotaxi Model → more articles
Why This Matters

Tesla's relatively small autonomous vehicle fleet in Texas highlights its slower progress in deploying fully autonomous robotaxis compared to competitors like Waymo. The new regulations and certification standards are pushing companies to clarify their vehicle capabilities, emphasizing the importance of genuine Level 4 autonomy for commercial deployment. This development underscores the competitive landscape in autonomous ride-hailing and the ongoing race for industry leadership.

Key Takeaways

A Tesla robotaxi drives on the street along South Congress Avenue in Austin, Texas, on June 22, 2025

Tesla now has 42 autonomous vehicles authorized for driverless ridehailing in Texas, a fleet that's less than one-tenth the size of Waymo's in the state.

Waymo, Alphabet's self-driving vehicle business, has 577 authorized robotaxis in Texas, according to new records available on the state's Department of Motor Vehicles website.

The records were published in an online database on May 28, as a new law took effect giving Texas greater power over commercial driverless vehicle operators. Texas law previously allowed for AV testing and operations on roadways, "as long as they meet the same safety and insurance requirements as every other vehicle on the road."

The new law requires operators of driverless vehicles, including Tesla, Waymo and others, to self-certify that their AVs are level 4 autonomous vehicles, per the standards established by SAE. Level 4 generally means an AV can operate in normal weather and on typical roads, without a a human driver on board.

Waymo has long counted their robotaxis as level 4, but Tesla has told regulators that most of its cars feature level 2 driver assistance systems.

Tesla has been operating its Robotaxi-branded service in Texas since June 2025, but hasn't disclosed details about how it came to self-certify any of its vehicles in the fleet as level 4. The company didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Tesla is counting on driverless cars to fuel much of its future growth as the company faces dramatically increased competition in the electric vehicle market and as CEO Elon Musk tries to prove he's at the forefront of artificial intelligence and robotics.

But Tesla is far behind Waymo, which has an existing commercial fleet of close to 4,000 vehicles across the U.S. and is rapidly expanding its paid service to new markets.

In Texas, Tesla also trails smaller player AV Ride, which had 317 automated vehicles authorized in the state, according to the DMV, while Amazon 's Zoox had 35.

... continue reading