Following Tesla's January 22, 2026, announcement of unsupervised robotaxi rides in Austin—a claim covered in prior reporting—riders report no such experiences a week later amid service disruptions from an ice storm and ahead of Q4 earnings. Bay Area operations face legal barriers, fueling doubts amid absent evidence.
Enthusiast David Moss traveled to Austin seeking an unsupervised ride, taking 42 trips in Model Y vehicles, but all included safety monitors. He posted on X: "42 Tesla Robotaxi Rides, 42 L’s, 1 goal of finding an unsupervised Model Y. It’s tough to get a ride on the app & every ride I take one I see legitimately 4-5 cars mapping the area that could be on the app. This was also my 5th ride in a row with the supervisor in the driver’s seat."
Tesla VP of Software Ashok Elluswamy clarified that operations began with "a few unsupervised vehicles mixed in with the broader Robotaxi fleet with Safety Monitors," planning gradual increases. However, an ice storm on January 24 paused services, and no riders have since confirmed unsupervised experiences. Reports suggest trailing vehicles with monitors shadowed the initial 'unsupervised' rides on January 22.
Tesla's January 28 Q4 2025 earnings letter highlighted 'Robotaxi' progress, including driverless testing in Austin since December and limited monitor removals in January. It also noted Bay Area ride-hailing via Full Self-Driving, but the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) confirmed Tesla lacks driverless permits, requiring human drivers.
Critics see parallels to prior hype, like a June 2025 'fully autonomous delivery' from Giga Texas that wasn't repeated. The timing—post-Davos autonomy claims and pre-earnings—raises marketing suspicions, especially with no scalable unsupervised evidence.
On January 28, Elon Musk claimed 500 Model Y robotaxis across Austin and the Bay Area providing paid rides, though supervision details remain vague.