Tesla extends free FSD transfer to orders by March 2026

Tesla has updated its policy for transferring Full Self-Driving (FSD) features, now allowing customers to qualify by placing orders for new vehicles by March 31, 2026, rather than requiring delivery by that date. This change broadens eligibility for the limited-time program. The update follows earlier announcements adjusting the transfer terms.

Tesla Inc. announced an update to its free Full Self-Driving (FSD) transfer program, extending the eligibility window for customers looking to move the feature from an existing vehicle to a new one.

Under the revised policy, customers must place an order for a new Tesla vehicle by March 31, 2026, to qualify. Previously, the requirement was to take delivery by March 31. Tesla stated on its website that only the new vehicle will retain access to FSD after the transfer.

Eligibility is strict: Customers must be the legal owner and registrant of the current vehicle, where FSD was purchased outright. Both the old and new vehicles need to be under the same Tesla Account, and all terms must be agreed upon before delivery. The program cannot be applied retroactively and is subject to change or termination at any time.

Vehicles under active leases, business, commercial, or pre-owned orders are ineligible. Additionally, the transferring vehicle must not have pending cancellation or buyback requests, outstanding liens, or balances.

A new note specifies that FSD (Supervised) from the Luxe Package cannot be transferred. Instead, it will factor into the trade-in value for Cyberbeast or 2026 Model S and Model X vehicles with the Luxe Package.

Once transferred, FSD remains with the new vehicle permanently. If the new vehicle is sold to a third party, the FSD feature stays with it and becomes available to the new owner.

This follows Tesla's January 19 announcement that the free transfer service would end at the end of March, and a January 27 update specifying eligibility for deliveries between April 24, 2025, and March 31, 2026.

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Photorealistic image depicting frustrated Cybertruck owners facing Tesla's new FSD transfer deadline of March 31, 2026, and price hike.
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Tesla tightens FSD Supervised transfer policy to March 31, 2026 delivery deadline

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Tesla has updated its Full Self-Driving (Supervised) transfer program, requiring new vehicle delivery by March 31, 2026, to qualify—a shift from prior order-placement criteria. This change, announced February 27 and refined on support pages, impacts Cybertruck Dual-Motor All-Wheel Drive buyers facing 2026-2027 deliveries and a recent price hike from $59,990 to $69,990, frustrating owners hoping to transfer $8,000+ software licenses.

Tesla has revised the language on its website regarding free transfers of Full Self-Driving (FSD) software. The update specifies a new delivery window for eligible vehicles. This change aims to clarify the offer for potential buyers.

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Tesla is notifying customers in the US and Canada via SMS and email that its free Full Self-Driving (FSD) transfer program—allowing owners to move FSD from old to new vehicles—will end after orders placed by March 31, 2026, the first firm date after multiple extensions. This coincides with the phase-out of one-time FSD purchases after February 14, 2026, leaving subscriptions as the only option.

Building on initial December promotions amid global sales challenges, Tesla details U.S.-focused incentives like zero-percent financing, $299 monthly leases, and three months of free Full Self-Driving to clear inventory and offset lost federal tax credits after November's sub-40,000 unit sales.

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Tesla has begun rolling out Full Self-Driving (FSD) version 14.2.2.2 to a larger group of owners. The update targets AI4-equipped Model 3, Model Y, Model S, Model X, and Cybertruck vehicles. This expansion highlights ongoing advancements in Tesla's autonomous driving technology.

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 has issued five Full Self-Driving (FSD) software updates in the past 2.5 weeks, averaging one every 3.5 days. This marks the company's fastest release cadence for FSD to date. Recent versions, including V14.1.4, continue to impress with features like emergency vehicle handling.

 

 

 

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