Lemonade launches 50% insurance discount for Tesla FSD miles

U.S. insurer Lemonade has introduced a new insurance product that cuts rates by 50% for miles driven using Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software. The company cites data showing FSD is safer than human drivers, marking the first external validation of Tesla's safety claims by a major underwriter. This pay-per-mile policy integrates with Tesla's API to track usage.

Lemonade's announcement on January 24, 2026, introduces an 'Autonomous Car' insurance option designed specifically for Tesla owners. The policy operates on a pay-per-mile basis, charging standard rates for human-driven miles based on the driver's risk profile. However, miles covered by FSD (Supervised) receive a 50% discount, enabled through integration with Tesla's Fleet API. This API provides real-time telemetry, distinguishing between human and FSD control on a second-by-second basis, similar to Tesla's own insurance system. The discount stems from Lemonade's analysis of actuarial data, which indicates fewer crashes when FSD is supervised compared to human driving. 'A car that sees 360 degrees, never gets drowsy, and reacts in milliseconds can’t be compared to a human,' stated Shai Wininger, Lemonade's co-founder and president. Wininger also noted that as FSD improves, Lemonade plans to reduce prices further, aligning incentives with Tesla's advancements. Availability begins with a rollout in Arizona on January 26, 2026, followed by Oregon on February 26. Tesla owners can apply via the Lemonade app or a dedicated webpage. Expansion is planned to other states including California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington. Beyond the discount, which exceeds Tesla's own 10-15% FSD bonuses, the move offers market validation for autonomous driving safety. Critics have long questioned FSD's claims, but Lemonade's pricing adjustment provides independent evidence that supervised autonomous miles are statistically safer and less costly to insure.

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Tesla Model Y on Arizona highway with Full Self-Driving engaged, Lemonade app showing 50% insurance savings for FSD users.
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Lemonade launches cheaper insurance for Tesla FSD users

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Insurance provider Lemonade Inc. has introduced a new policy offering about 50% lower per-mile rates for Tesla drivers using the Full Self-Driving system. The product, called Autonomous Car Insurance, starts in Arizona on January 26 and expands to Oregon in February. It relies on data from Tesla to assess reduced risk during FSD engagement.

Insurer Lemonade has introduced a new product offering up to 50% lower rates for Tesla vehicles using Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology. This pay-per-mile policy undercuts Tesla's own insurance discounts and stems from a data-sharing partnership with the automaker. The move highlights growing confidence in assisted driving features amid ongoing safety debates.

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Lemonade has introduced its Autonomous Car insurance product for Tesla vehicles in Oregon, offering drivers significant discounts for using Full Self-Driving technology. The program, announced by co-founder Shai Wininger on social media, provides about 50% off on insurance costs for miles driven with FSD. It relies on Tesla's safety data showing FSD miles are twice as safe as manual driving.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced that the company's supervised Full Self-Driving software will shift to a subscription-only model at $99 per month starting after February 14, ending outright purchases. Owners expressed mixed reactions, from frustration over recurring costs and safety worries to enthusiasm for the technology's convenience. An analyst views the change as a sign of Tesla's growing confidence in its self-driving capabilities.

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Tesla announced on January 23, 2026, that new Model 3, Model Y, and base Cybertruck vehicles in the US and Canada will no longer include standard Autopilot features like lane-centering Autosteer, limiting free access to Traffic-Aware Cruise Control only. Advanced capabilities now require a $99 monthly Full Self-Driving (FSD) Supervised subscription, following the January 18 decision to end $8,000 one-time FSD purchases after February 14. The shift, offering new buyers a 30-day FSD trial, faces regulatory scrutiny over misleading terms and safety concerns, alongside mixed customer reactions.

A Tesla vehicle equipped with Full Self-Driving (Supervised) version 14 has completed a 5,008-mile journey entirely autonomously, with the human occupant not touching the pedals or steering wheel once. This feat, reported on social media, equates to the distance from Miami, Florida, to Anchorage, Alaska. The drive consisted of 10% city streets and 90% highway, with no interventions required.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced on January 14, 2026, via X that the company will end one-time purchases of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) software after February 14, 2026, moving exclusively to subscriptions amid a California court ruling deeming FSD marketing misleading, ongoing NHTSA investigations, declining sales (1.64 million vehicles in 2025, down 9%), low adoption (12-15%), BYD overtaking as top EV maker, and rising competition from Nvidia, Rivian, and Waymo. The shift may aid Musk's trillion-dollar compensation goals requiring 10 million active FSD subscriptions.

 

 

 

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