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.
Musk posted on X: "Tesla will stop selling FSD after Feb 14. FSD will only be available as a monthly subscription thereafter." Tesla confirmed the change on January 15, noting existing $8,000 one-time buyers retain access. Subscriptions have been available since 2021 at $199/month initially, now $99/month or $999/year, alongside the one-time option introduced in late 2022 (price peaked at $15,000 before dropping to $8,000 by 2024). Post-February pricing is undisclosed.
FSD adoption remains low at ~12% of the fleet per CFO reports and 15% per investor Gary Black of The Future Fund LLC. The pivot coincides with 2025 challenges: deliveries fell 9% to 1.64 million vehicles, Q4 dropped 16% to 418,227 units, Tesla lost its top EV spot to BYD globally, U.S. market share dipped ~2% post-announcement, though Model Y led U.S. EV sales with 357,528 units.
The timing aligns with a December 17, 2025, California Superior Court ruling effective February 14, 2026, labeling Tesla's FSD and Autopilot marketing deceptive and the FSD name "actually, unambiguously false and counterfactual" for its Level 2 SAE status (requiring constant supervision). The order mandates ad revisions within 60 days or risks sales halt in California; Tesla had until January 15 to petition for reconsideration, with no public confirmation.
Speculation links the shift to evading ad restrictions, easing FSD license transfers for vehicle upgrades, boosting adoption to meet Musk's November 2025 compensation package milestones (12 tranches potentially worth $1 trillion, including 10 million active FSD subscriptions, 20 million vehicle deliveries, 1 million Optimus robots, and 1 million commercial Robotaxis), or enhancing AI data collection.
Regulatory scrutiny intensifies: NHTSA extended its probe into FSD on 2.9 million vehicles until February 23, 2026, investigating 58 incidents including 23 injuries and 14 crashes. FSD handles lane changes, city streets, and traffic but demands driver attention; older Hardware 3 vehicles may need retrofits, which Musk pledged.
Competition heats up: Nvidia launched open-source Alpamayo using Vision-Language-Action, called a 'ChatGPT moment' for self-driving by CEO Jensen Huang; Rivian offers Autonomy+ at $50/month or $2,500 one-time with LiDAR; Waymo logs 450,000+ weekly driverless trips. Subscriptions could lower barriers (recouping $8,000 over 80+ months) and reduce legal risks, but experts doubt it fully resolves marketing or autonomy concerns amid Tesla's ambitions.