Tesla has introduced camera washers on the side repeater and rear bumper cameras of its robotaxis operating driverless rides in Austin, a feature absent from standard Model Y vehicles. This hardware upgrade aims to maintain clear visibility for autonomous operation without manual intervention. The change coincides with the recent launch of public unsupervised rides in the Texas capital.
Tesla launched public driverless robotaxi rides in Austin earlier this week, allowing passengers to experience the service without safety monitors onboard. These rides mark a step forward in the company's vision-only autonomous driving approach, where cameras serve as the primary sensors for navigation, speed limit recognition, and traffic sign detection.
Observers noted a new addition to the fleet: camera washers installed on the side repeater cameras and rear bumper cameras. Standard Model Y vehicles include a washer only for the front camera, leaving side and rear lenses to be cleaned manually by owners. In contrast, the robotaxis in Austin employ these washers to ensure uninterrupted operation by automatically keeping the exterior cameras clean.
This is the first public sighting of such washers on Tesla's autonomous vehicles. Previously, safety monitors may have handled lens cleaning during supervised operations. As Tesla expands its robotaxi fleet and shifts to fully unsupervised self-driving, the company requires solutions for maintaining camera clarity without human help, at least between scheduled washes.
Social media posts highlighted the feature, including images from Teslarati showing the side repeater camera washer on January 23, 2026, and the rear camera washer on January 24, 2026. The upgrade addresses a long-standing request from Tesla enthusiasts, particularly since the adoption of vision-only autonomy, to prevent dirt or debris from impairing the system's performance.
The Austin deployment is limited, with only a few vehicles offering completely driverless rides, drawing travelers eager to test the technology in the Lone Star State.