Courtroom scene illustrating Tesla's lawsuit against California DMV over Autopilot and Full Self-Driving false advertising claims.
Courtroom scene illustrating Tesla's lawsuit against California DMV over Autopilot and Full Self-Driving false advertising claims.
Bilde generert av AI

Tesla sues California DMV to overturn false advertising ruling on Autopilot and Full Self-Driving

Bilde generert av AI

Tesla filed a lawsuit on February 13, 2026, against the California Department of Motor Vehicles, challenging a December 2025 ruling that accused the company of misleading consumers through marketing of its Autopilot and Full Self-Driving features. Despite complying with required changes to avoid a sales license suspension, Tesla argues the decision was factually erroneous, legally flawed, and lacked evidence of consumer harm. The dispute underscores intense scrutiny of Tesla's driver-assistance systems amid its major California operations.

Tesla Inc. filed a lawsuit on February 13, 2026, in California Superior Court against the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), seeking to reverse a December 2025 administrative ruling from the Office of Administrative Hearings. The ruling found Tesla guilty of false advertising since May 2021 for promoting Autopilot and Full Self-Driving (FSD) Capability as able to handle trips without driver input, despite the systems being Level 2 advanced driver-assistance tools requiring constant human supervision, per the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).

The case stems from a DMV investigation launched in 2021 into Tesla's driver-assistance systems. Formal accusations against Tesla's manufacturer and dealer licenses were filed in November 2023, culminating in a 2025 multi-day hearing. The administrative law judge sided with the DMV, describing Autopilot as following 'a long but unlawful tradition' of ambiguity and FSD as 'actually, unambiguously false and counterfactual.' The ruling, effective January 15, 2026, proposed a 30-day suspension of Tesla's vehicle sales licenses in California unless marketing changes were made within 60-90 days.

Tesla responded by discontinuing Basic Autopilot in the U.S. in January 2026, rebranding it as Traffic Aware Cruise Control, removing 'Autopilot' from new vehicle equipment lists in the U.S. and Canada, consistently labeling FSD as 'Full Self-Driving (Supervised)'—a change introduced over two years prior—and shifting to a $99-per-month subscription model, ending the $8,000 one-time purchase. On February 17, 2026, the DMV confirmed compliance and imposed a permanent stay on the suspension. DMV Director Steve Gordon stated, 'The department is pleased that Tesla took the required action to remain in compliance with the State of California’s consumer protections.' A DMV spokesperson added: 'An Administrative Law Judge found that Tesla broke state law by misleading consumers with the term ‘autopilot.’ Tesla agreed to stop this practice, and now they’re challenging it anyway. DMV is committed to protecting the traveling public and will defend the findings in court.'

Despite compliance, Tesla contends the ruling 'wrongfully and baselessly' branded it a false advertiser. The company argues it was impossible to purchase or use the features without clear disclaimers on non-autonomy, notes the DMV relied almost entirely on one law professor's testimony without consumer witnesses, cites its polling showing only about one-third of buyers confused, claims violations of due process and the statute of limitations (Autopilot branding since 2014, FSD since 2016), and seeks to erase the finding from its record.

The lawsuit highlights Tesla's pivotal role in California, home to a large workforce and where the Model Y has been the top-selling vehicle for three years. It occurs amid broader concerns: NHTSA data as of January 15, 2026, shows over 2,800 crashes involving Tesla's systems (vs. 108 for General Motors), with Supervised FSD logging 8.2 billion miles. A federal judge upheld a $243 million verdict holding Tesla partially liable in an August 2025 fatal Autopilot crash. The NHTSA opened a probe in October 2025 into 2.88 million Tesla vehicles over 58 FSD incidents, including crashes, injuries, and failures like running red lights. Tesla faces competition from Waymo and Zoox in autonomous driving. The case is ongoing with no court date set.

Hva folk sier

X discussions on Tesla's lawsuit against the California DMV reflect diverse sentiments: Tesla supporters praise the company for fighting back against what they call erroneous regulatory actions, critics argue it underscores misleading marketing of Autopilot and FSD, and news accounts provide neutral updates on the legal challenge.

Relaterte artikler

Tesla showroom in California with rebranded 'Autopilot' features complying with DMV order, avoiding license suspension.
Bilde generert av AI

Tesla drops 'Autopilot' from California marketing, rebrands features to avoid DMV suspension

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

Tesla has ceased using the term 'Autopilot' in its California vehicle marketing and rebranded driver assistance features, complying with a California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) order and avoiding a 30-day suspension of its dealer license. The changes stem from a years-long dispute over misleading names for its Level 2 systems, which require constant human supervision. DMV Director Steve Gordon commended Tesla for protecting consumers.

In a follow-up to NHTSA's October 2025 investigation into Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) software for dangerous maneuvers like running red lights, Tesla must submit data on over 8,300 potential violations by March 9, 2026. This is separate from reports on 14 robotaxi incidents since June 2025. Tesla's safety data shows improving autonomous performance amid scrutiny.

Rapportert av AI

Tesla announced on January 23, 2026, that new Model 3, Model Y, and base Cybertruck vehicles in the US and Canada will no longer include standard Autopilot features like lane-centering Autosteer, limiting free access to Traffic-Aware Cruise Control only. Advanced capabilities now require a $99 monthly Full Self-Driving (FSD) Supervised subscription, following the January 18 decision to end $8,000 one-time FSD purchases after February 14. The shift, offering new buyers a 30-day FSD trial, faces regulatory scrutiny over misleading terms and safety concerns, alongside mixed customer reactions.

A federal judge in Miami has denied Tesla's request to overturn a $243 million jury verdict related to a fatal 2019 Autopilot crash in Florida. The ruling means Tesla must now face the judgment at the trial court level, though the company plans to appeal. The case involves a collision that killed one person and injured another.

Rapportert av AI

Tesla owners have collectively driven more than 7.5 billion miles using Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software, with the majority on highways. Meanwhile, public testing of unsupervised FSD is expanding in Austin. A personal account highlights seamless performance in challenging conditions.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk stated that Full Self-Driving (FSD) Supervised could receive regulatory approval in the Netherlands as early as March 20. He shared this update during an interview at Giga Berlin, citing information from local authorities. The approval would mark the first such greenlight for the software in Europe.

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis