Following Tesla's Q4 2025 earnings announcement to repurpose factories for Cybercab robotaxis and Optimus robots, CEO Elon Musk warned on X of 'agonizingly slow' early production rates due to the projects' novelty, though he expects eventual rapid scaling. This tempers expectations amid Tesla's push into AI and autonomy.
In a post on X shortly after Tesla's Q4 2025 earnings call, CEO Elon Musk addressed production challenges for the Cybercab—a driverless robotaxi lacking a steering wheel or pedals—and Optimus, the humanoid robot key to Tesla's AI ambitions.
"For Cybercab and Optimus, almost everything is new, so the early production rate will be agonizingly slow, but eventually end up being insanely fast," Musk wrote. The statement underscores the hurdles of manufacturing groundbreaking tech, where initial ramps must resolve novel engineering issues before high-volume output.
This follows Tesla's plan to end Model S and X production by Q2 2026, freeing Fremont factory capacity for up to 1 million Optimus units annually and Cybercab rollout from Q2 2026. Musk views these as pivotal to Tesla's autonomy-focused future.
However, Tesla's self-driving tech shows mixed progress, with recent deployments sans safety monitors in Austin, Texas, still grappling with real-world obstacles. Full commercial launches for both products remain distant, potentially testing investor and consumer patience.