Tesla has produced its first Cybercab, a steering wheel-less autonomous vehicle, at Gigafactory Texas. The company shared a photo of the milestone on X, with volume production planned for April 2026. The Cybercab is designed exclusively for robotaxi service, raising questions about the readiness of Tesla's self-driving technology.
On February 17, 2026, Tesla announced that the first production unit of its Cybercab had rolled off the assembly line at Gigafactory Texas, located just outside Austin. The vehicle, a two-seater with butterfly doors, lacks a steering wheel, pedals, and side mirrors, relying entirely on autonomous driving software for operation. It features a 35 kWh battery offering about 200 miles of range and inductive charging, with a projected price under $30,000.
CEO Elon Musk has emphasized the Cybercab's role in Tesla's shift toward autonomy, stating that production lines could eventually produce one unit every 10 seconds. In a post on X, Musk referenced a bet with YouTuber Marques Brownlee (MKBHD), who doubted a sub-$30,000 price before 2027 and offered to shave his head if wrong; Musk replied, "it's gonna happen."
Tesla began testing Model Y vehicles as robotaxis in Austin in June 2025, expanding to San Francisco with around 200 vehicles total. However, reports highlight challenges with the technology. Electrek's analysis of the Austin pilot showed 14 crashes over 800,000 miles, equating to one incident every 57,000 miles—nearly four times the human driver rate of one per 229,000 miles. Availability stood at 19% over a 48-hour period, and many "unsupervised" rides involved trailing safety vehicles with monitors.
Musk acknowledged in January 2026 that Tesla needs about 10 billion miles of data for safe unsupervised self-driving, projecting the milestone around July 2026, followed by further training and testing. The Cybercab will use current-generation AI4 hardware, as the next AI5 chip is delayed to mid-2027. Tesla's chairwoman, Robyn Denholm, suggested a steering wheel might be needed, but Musk dismissed it. Prototypes were spotted with wheels in Austin last year, and the "Cybercab" trademark remains unsecured, with a deadline extension to March 14.
The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating Full Self-Driving (FSD) software across 2.9 million vehicles for traffic law violations, based on 62 complaints as of December 2025. Unlike competitors like Waymo, which use lidar and radar alongside cameras, Tesla relies solely on cameras and software. Musk described autonomy as "pretty much a solved problem," with validation underway for production.
Tesla has a history of hardware changes betting on autonomy, such as removing radar in 2021 and turn signal stalks in 2023, later reversing some decisions with retrofits costing up to $700. Critics view the Cybercab as the most extreme such bet, with no fallback if software issues persist.