Leaked images showcase redesigned production-ready Tesla Cybercab

Following the recent prototype sighting in downtown Austin, leaked images and video reveal Tesla's production-ready Cybercab—a steering- and pedal-less vehicle for the 2026 Robotaxi fleet. Design refinements prioritize passenger comfort, with the vehicle displayed at Santana Row showroom in San Jose and spotted on Austin public streets.

Tesla's Cybercab is nearing mass production in April 2026 after testing on factory grounds and public streets, including the prototype observed driving in Austin traffic with temporary safety modifications.

New images shared by Sawyer Merritt on X (sourced from Cory_17) depict the updated production version at Tesla's Santana Row showroom. Interior enhancements for passenger-friendliness include ergonomic seats with upgraded cushions, two USB-C ports in the center console, refreshed ambient lighting, new carpet, and a recessed 21-inch dashboard display. An open dashboard slit indicates air vents, while powered butterfly doors have B-pillar controls. The redesigned trunk features a narrower opening, smoother lining, front carpet, and robust struts, possibly with rear vents.

Exterior changes incorporate frameless windows, dual windshield wipers, thicker-tired wheel covers, an updated front lightbar and bumper, plus tweaks to the roof, headliner, rear hatch, and door mechanisms—lessons from real-world testing.

The Cybercab will bolster Tesla's Austin Robotaxi service, where paid rides open to owners' vehicles and dedicated units in 2026 alongside FSD 14 (Unsupervised). Elon Musk envisions $0.30-per-mile costs at scale with wireless charging and self-cleaning, versus $1.25-$2 today.

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Tesla Cybercab robotaxi interior at DOT event: spacious two-seat autonomous cabin with panoramic roof, central screen, no steering wheel.
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Tesla unveils Cybercab robotaxi interior at DOT event

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Tesla showcased the interior of its two-seat Cybercab robotaxi at a U.S. Department of Transportation event in Washington, D.C., highlighting features for autonomous rides. The display emphasized accessibility and space efficiency, with mass production planned for April 2026. Riders can expect app-based hailing similar to Uber and Lyft, but without a human driver.

Following the first Cybercab production unit in February, Tesla released a video on April 23 showing multiple steerless robotaxis rolling off the line and driving autonomously to the outbound lot. This footage underscores rapid progress toward volume production amid broader autonomous driving advancements.

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Victor Nechita, Tesla's vehicle program manager for the Cybercab, has left the company after nearly nine years, just days after the first production unit rolled off the line at Gigafactory Texas. Nechita, who joined as a Model 3 intern in 2017, led the Cybercab from concept to initial production. His departure adds to a series of senior executive exits at Tesla amid preparations for volume production in April.

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