Thomas Dmytryk, the Tesla director responsible for developing the company's over-the-air update system and Robotaxi software backbone, has left after 11 years. His departure adds to an ongoing exodus of senior executives at the automaker. Dmytryk cited family priorities in his announcement.
Thomas Dmytryk joined Tesla in early 2015 when the company produced around 50,000 vehicles annually, primarily the Model S and Model X. He led a small team of five engineers focused on the over-the-air (OTA) update pipeline, vehicle connectivity, and the command layer for the Tesla mobile app. Over time, this infrastructure expanded to support a global fleet approaching 10 million vehicles, enabling seamless software updates, bug fixes, and new features.
In the later part of his tenure, Dmytryk's team developed the software foundation for Tesla's Robotaxi ride-hailing service. The service launched in Austin in June 2025 with safety operators and advanced to unsupervised rides in January 2026, though it remains limited with long wait times and no aggressive fleet expansion. Tesla recently increased the base fare from $1 to $3.25 to manage demand.
Dmytryk held the title of Director for about seven months, following years as a Senior Software Engineering Manager. In a LinkedIn post on March 9, 2026, he announced his departure, stating, “After 11 incredible years at Tesla, I’m closing the book. It’s been the ride of a lifetime: always on the news, innovating relentlessly, constantly pushing the limits. ... Human life’s always been my North Star, right now I need to be with mines.” He praised Tesla's leadership and frontline employees, adding that the company's future is “extremely bright” and it is “just getting started.”
This exit fits into a pattern of departures among Tesla's senior technical leaders since mid-2024. Notable losses include Drew Baglino in April 2024, David Lau in 2025, Omead Afshar in mid-2025, Model Y and Cybertruck program managers in November 2025, a manufacturing director in January 2026, a head of North American sales in February 2026, and Victor Nechita, Cybercab program manager, recently. Separately, Vice President of Finance Sendil Palani announced his departure after 17 years, without specifying reasons.
Tesla plans to expand Robotaxi to Phoenix, Miami, and Las Vegas by mid-2026, as volume production of the Cybercab begins in April 2026 at Giga Texas.