Waymo expands robotaxi service to four new US cities

Waymo launched driverless taxi operations in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando on February 24, 2026, bringing its total to 10 cities. The service initially opens to select riders in these areas. Meanwhile, competitor Tesla operates driverless robotaxis in zero cities.

Waymo, a subsidiary of Alphabet, announced the addition of four new cities to its level 4 driverless taxi network on February 24, 2026. The expansion includes Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio in Texas, as well as Orlando in Florida, where the company already operates in Austin and Miami, respectively.

Each new service area starts with coverage of downtown regions, expanding outward. In Orlando, the area spans about 60 square miles, including parts toward resorts and Disney World, but excludes airports and highways for now. San Antonio also covers 60 square miles, Dallas 50 square miles, and Houston the smallest at 25 square miles. Waymo's rollout begins with testing involving employees, then invites select public riders via its app, with broader access expected over months.

This move increases Waymo's total to 10 cities, with 18 more planned, including international sites like London and Tokyo. The Miami service launched just a month prior, and Austin's area has grown amid competition.

In Orlando, the first official rider was Mayor Buddy Dyer, following months of test runs for select Central Florida residents.

Comparatively, Tesla, which has long claimed leadership in robotaxis through its data from millions of vehicles, currently offers no unmonitored driverless taxi services. In Austin, Tesla's rides involve a safety driver in the passenger seat and require additional mapping. It has not applied for driverless permits in California, where vehicles have human drivers. CEO Elon Musk had predicted robotaxis for half the US population by the end of 2025, a goal unmet.

Other players include Zoox, offering limited free rides on the Las Vegas Strip and planning San Francisco expansion, and formerly Cruise, which halted operations after a 2023 incident involving a pedestrian.

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Illustration of Tesla's unsupervised Robotaxi driving riderless through Dallas streets during launch in Texas cities Austin, Dallas, and Houston.
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Tesla launches unsupervised Robotaxi service in Austin, Dallas, and Houston

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Tesla has launched unsupervised Robotaxi rides in Austin, Dallas, and Houston, Texas, with the service expanding to Dallas and Houston on April 18. Geofenced areas are active in Houston's Jersey Village neighborhood and Dallas' Highland Park, as shown in maps shared on X. A regular customer ride was confirmed in Dallas shortly after rollout, and Tesla showcased a 360-degree view of a ride without onboard safety monitors.

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.

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Waymo has begun offering driverless ride-hailing services in Miami, Florida, marking its sixth city for level 4 robotaxis. The service covers a 60-square-mile area around downtown. This expansion comes as Tesla initiates a limited driverless operation in Austin.

Tesla Robotaxi service testing has been spotted in Dallas, Texas, using Model Y vehicles with rear camera washers. These vehicles, which match those in Austin, bear Texas plates, and one was seen simulating a pickup and dropoff. Tesla previously named Dallas among seven metro areas for robotaxi coverage in the first half of 2026.

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Tesla initiated unsupervised robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, on January 22, 2026, advancing its driverless ambitions amid a Full Self-Driving (FSD) subscription overhaul effective February 14, plans for Optimus humanoid robot sales by end-2027, falling vehicle deliveries, and intensifying regulatory probes.

Tesla has expanded the geofence for its unsupervised Robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, now allowing rides north of the river into downtown for the first time. This builds on the service's launch in January 2026 and was reported by Tesla news account Sawyer Merritt on March 31.

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Waymo-backed robotaxis are quietly operating on Tokyo's streets as tests continue. The trials, conducted by Japanese taxi firm Nihon Kotsu in partnership with the California-based Waymo, could see a service rollout in Japan by 2026, though no firm date has been set.

 

 

 

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