Elon Musk and Tesla AI director test unsupervised Robotaxi rides

Tesla CEO Elon Musk and AI Director Ashok Elluswamy shared firsthand experiences with unmanned Robotaxi vehicles in Austin, Texas, highlighting rapid progress toward unsupervised autonomy. Musk described a ride with no safety monitor as featuring 'perfect driving,' while Elluswamy called the back-seat journey 'an amazing experience.' These tests signal Tesla's push to remove human oversight from its self-driving fleet.

On Christmas Eve 2025, Elon Musk and Tesla's Head of AI, Ashok Elluswamy, posted about their rides in Tesla Robotaxi vehicles operating without any occupants in the driver's seat. Musk, who sat in the passenger seat, recounted his Sunday drive around Austin: "A Tesla with no safety monitor in the car and me sitting in the passenger seat took me all around Austin on Sunday with perfect driving."

Elluswamy shared a two-minute video from the rear seat of an unmanned Tesla Model Y equipped with Hardware 4 (AI4) and the latest unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) software. The footage captured the vehicle navigating Austin streets, making a right turn at an intersection, waiting at a traffic light, and handling pedestrians smoothly. "It's an amazing experience!" Elluswamy captioned the post. In the video, he noted the evolution: "If you remember, a few months ago we had safety monitors in passenger seats, but these Teslas are done now with no one in the car, no one's driving the car."

These demonstrations build on earlier sightings of unmanned Teslas on Austin roads, which Musk confirmed as part of ongoing tests: "Testing is underway with no occupants in the car." Tesla secured statewide approval in Texas to test FSD and launch Robotaxi services, enabling data collection over large areas.

Musk has repeatedly forecasted imminent unsupervised operations. At an xAI Hackathon earlier in December 2025, he stated: "Unsupervised is pretty much solved at this point. So there will be Tesla Robotaxis operating in Austin with no one in them. Not even anyone in the passenger seat in about three weeks." He echoed this timeline during the 2025 Annual Shareholder Meeting and the Q3 2025 earnings call. The Robotaxi service launched earlier in 2025, and these executive tests underscore Tesla's confidence in achieving fully autonomous rides without human intervention.

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Illustration of a driverless Tesla robotaxi carrying passengers unsupervised through downtown Austin, Texas, with city landmarks in the background.
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Tesla launches unsupervised robotaxi rides in Austin

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Tesla has begun offering public robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, without safety monitors in the vehicles, marking a milestone in its autonomous driving efforts. The company announced the change on January 22, 2026, starting with a small number of unsupervised cars mixed into the fleet. This follows years of promises from CEO Elon Musk and comes amid competition from rivals like Waymo.

Following initial tests on December 14, fresh sightings confirm Tesla's robotaxis operating without safety drivers in Austin, Texas. Full Self-Driving head Ashok Elluswamy verified the reports on social media, supporting CEO Elon Musk's push for unsupervised services in 2025.

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Tesla has begun testing its Robotaxi vehicles without any occupants in Austin, Texas, marking a key step toward fully autonomous rides. CEO Elon Musk confirmed the development on December 14, 2025, with two Model Y units spotted driving on public roads. This follows the removal of safety monitors, as the company aims to launch driverless services soon.

Elon Musk's bold predictions for Tesla's robotaxi service and full self-driving technology largely failed to materialize by the end of 2025. While a limited launch occurred in Austin, safety drivers persisted, and expansion fell far below expectations. Looking ahead, Musk anticipates widespread robotaxi deployment in 2026.

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Elon Musk has revealed prototypes of Tesla's self-driving robotaxi and robovan, advancing the company's vision for autonomous transportation. The vehicles feature designs without steering wheels or pedals, powered by Tesla's Full Self-Driving software. This unveiling highlights Tesla's push toward a robotaxi network where vehicles can operate independently.

Tesla plans to roughly double its Robotaxi pilot fleet in Austin, Texas, next month, growing from about 30 to 60 vehicles. This expansion falls far short of the company's earlier goal of 500 robotaxis by the end of 2025. The service remains supervised, with human monitors in each vehicle, contributing to long wait times for users.

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Tesla has reported five new crashes involving its robotaxi fleet in Austin, Texas, bringing the total to 14 incidents since the service began operating in June 2025. The latest data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reveals a crash rate higher than typical human drivers, amid ongoing scrutiny of the autonomous system. One earlier incident has been updated to include a hospitalization.

 

 

 

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