Waymo opens driverless rides to public in Nashville

Waymo has launched its robotaxi service to the first public riders in Nashville, Tennessee. Riders can hail autonomous vehicles through the Waymo app after receiving an invite, with expansion planned on a rolling basis. The service will also integrate with the Lyft app later this year.

Waymo, owned by Alphabet, began offering fully driverless rides in Nashville on Tuesday. The initial service covers 60 square miles, including neighborhoods such as Midtown, 12 South, East Nashville and Broadway. The company is testing operations at Nashville International Airport and aims to serve travelers there soon. Nashville marks Waymo's first location in Tennessee and its 11th metro area overall, joining Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Austin, Atlanta, Miami, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Orlando. Further expansions to dozens of cities are planned in the coming months and years. Waymo already operates at four international airports: Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, San Jose Mineta International Airport, San Francisco International Airport and San Antonio International Airport. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee welcomed the launch, stating, “By leveraging private sector technologies like Waymo's fully autonomous vehicles, we're expanding mobility in ways we couldn't achieve on our own and further accelerating economic growth.” Later this year, Waymo vehicles will become available via the Lyft app, with Lyft handling fleet maintenance and cleaning. To ride, interested users should download the Waymo app and check social channels for access codes. Waymo highlighted its safety record, noting that over 170 million autonomous miles driven through December 2025 resulted in a 13-fold reduction in serious injury crashes and pedestrian injury crashes compared to human drivers.

Articoli correlati

Waymo robotaxi arriving at SFO Airport Rental Car Center for passenger pickup, highlighting new autonomous service launch.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Waymo starts robotaxi service at San Francisco International Airport

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

Alphabet's Waymo has begun offering fully autonomous rides to San Francisco International Airport, marking the third major airport in its network. The service launches with a select group of riders and pickups limited to the Rental Car Center, with plans for broader access soon. This expansion comes amid scrutiny from a recent incident involving a child pedestrian in Santa Monica.

Waymo, Alphabet's autonomous driving company, announced the expansion of its driverless ride-hailing service to Dallas, Houston, San Antonio in Texas, and Orlando in Florida. Invitations are rolling out immediately to select customers in these areas via the Waymo app. This brings the total number of operational metro areas to ten.

Riportato dall'IA

Waymo has begun offering fully autonomous robotaxi rides to passengers in Miami, marking the latest expansion of its service network. The launch follows testing in the city and adds to operations in places like Phoenix and Los Angeles. Nearly 10,000 residents have already signed up for access.

Tesla has begun offering public robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, without safety monitors in the vehicles, marking a milestone in its autonomous driving efforts. The company announced the change on January 22, 2026, starting with a small number of unsupervised cars mixed into the fleet. This follows years of promises from CEO Elon Musk and comes amid competition from rivals like Waymo.

Riportato dall'IA

A Jefferies analysis found Tesla's robotaxis in Austin cheaper than Uber but with longer wait times and suboptimal routes. The firm noted most rides still require safety monitors. Meanwhile, Tesla has made no progress toward driverless approvals in California.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk dismissed Alphabet's Waymo as a competitor in autonomous driving, stating on X that it 'never really had a chance' against Tesla. The comment responded to Google DeepMind Chief Scientist Jeff Dean's highlight of Waymo's superior rider-only autonomous miles. Musk's remark comes amid Tesla's plans to launch unsupervised robotaxis in Austin soon.

Riportato dall'IA

Sawyer Merritt, a prominent commentator on electric vehicles, has posed a question on X about the projected number of fully autonomous robotaxis operated by Waymo and Tesla by the end of 2026. The poll specifies vehicles without human safety monitors on public roads. For context, Merritt notes Waymo's current operations with around 2,500 vehicles providing 450,000 rides weekly.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta