Tesla has received approval from the Arizona Department of Transportation to operate a paid ride-hailing service in the state, expanding its supervised robotaxi program from Texas and California. The permit requires human safety drivers in all vehicles, marking a step toward broader deployment but not yet full autonomy. This development allows testing in metro Phoenix while competitors like Waymo operate more advanced driverless services.
On November 17, 2025, the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) granted Tesla a Transportation Network Company (TNC) permit, following the company's application on November 13. This approval enables Tesla to offer paid ride-hailing services in Arizona, similar to Uber and Waymo, but with a key restriction: all vehicles must include a human safety driver on board. The service will expand into metro Phoenix, building on Tesla's robotaxi pilot launched in Austin, Texas, around June 2025, and a supervised program added in California shortly after.
Tesla's robotaxis rely solely on cameras and artificial intelligence for navigation, differing from Waymo's approach, which incorporates cameras, AI, radar, and lidar systems. In Arizona, as in other states, safety drivers must remain vigilant and ready to intervene, using Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) system. In Austin, these drivers sit in the front passenger seat with access to a kill switch for emergencies.
The permit does not authorize driverless operations; an additional permit would be required, and Tesla has not yet applied for it, according to ADOT. This follows a September 2025 authorization allowing Tesla to test autonomous vehicles in Arizona with safety drivers under a self-certification framework. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has expressed ambitions for the service to reach eight to ten metropolitan areas by the end of 2025, though earlier claims of covering half the US population appear to have been scaled back, with expansion limited to a few more cities.
While Tesla promotes the service as Robotaxi, it remains supervised and falls short of Level 4 autonomy, the classification needed for driverless operation in places like California. The company hopes to remove human monitors before year's end, but this timeline is viewed as optimistic given regulatory hurdles in states like Arizona and California.