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.

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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.

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.

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Tesla has begun testing its Robotaxi service in Phoenix, Arizona, using a Model Y vehicle equipped with rear camera washers and a California manufacturer license plate. The company had previously announced Phoenix as one of seven planned metro areas for robotaxi coverage in the first half of 2026.

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