Tesla's plans to add Apple CarPlay to its vehicles have been delayed by a compatibility issue between Apple Maps and its own navigation software during autonomous driving. The company requested engineering changes from Apple, which were implemented in a later iOS 26 update, but slow adoption of the software prompted a pause. With iOS 26 now on 74% of recent iPhones, Tesla may accelerate the rollout.
Tesla has long resisted integrating Apple CarPlay into its vehicles, with CEO Elon Musk previously dismissing customer requests for the feature. However, in late 2025, the company shifted course, aiming to add CarPlay by the end of that year to boost sales amid declining deliveries—down 16% quarter-over-quarter and 9% year-over-year in Q4 2025, according to reports.
The primary obstacle emerged during testing: turn-by-turn directions from Tesla's maps app failed to sync properly with Apple Maps while autonomous driving was active. This mismatch could confuse drivers, especially since CarPlay is set to run in a window alongside Tesla's infotainment system without accessing features like Full Self-Driving (FSD). Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported that Tesla asked Apple to make engineering changes to Maps, which the company agreed to and delivered via an iOS 26 update—not the initial September release, but a subsequent version.
Adoption of iOS 26 lagged behind expectations, leading Tesla to hold off on the feature to avoid compatibility problems with users on older software like iOS 25. Apple stated last week that iOS 26 is now installed on 74% of iPhones released in the last four years, slightly trailing the 76% adoption rate iOS 18 achieved by January 2025. Gurman noted this as a potential turning point, suggesting Tesla could now proceed without widespread glitches.
The integration will allow Apple users to access iMessage, Apple Podcasts, Apple Maps, widgets, Live Activities, and an upcoming Siri update within Tesla's interface. Reports indicate Tesla might pair CarPlay with Apple Wallet Car Key support, though no firm release date has been announced. This development highlights ongoing tensions between proprietary automotive systems and smartphone ecosystems, as some manufacturers consider dropping CarPlay support altogether.