Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) system has accumulated over 8.4 billion cumulative miles driven worldwide as of March 2, 2026, per the company's safety page—nearing CEO Elon Musk's 10 billion mile target for safe unsupervised self-driving. In parallel, Tesla has begun supervised FSD testing in Abu Dhabi under local oversight.
Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised), or FSD (Supervised), has reached over 8.4 billion miles driven globally, according to the official safety page updated on March 2, 2026. Tesla observer Sawyer Merritt highlighted the steady growth: about 6 million miles in 2021, 80 million in 2022, 670 million in 2023, 2.25 billion in 2024, 4.25 billion in 2025, and roughly 1 billion in the first 50 days of 2026. At this pace, the fleet could hit 10 billion miles by year-end, boosted by Tesla's growing vehicle population, free trials, and Robotaxi services.
This real-world data is crucial for refining the neural network-based system, capturing edge cases and complex scenarios. Musk has stated that around 10 billion miles may be needed to handle the 'long tail' of rare driving situations for safe, unsupervised autonomy at scale. Full unsupervised operation still requires regulatory approval.
Tesla has also launched supervised FSD testing in Abu Dhabi, overseen by the Integrated Transport Centre—the emirate's first official framework for such trials. It's supported by the Smart and Autonomous Systems Council and developed with the Legislation Lab at the UAE Cabinet's General Secretariat.
For comparison, Alphabet's Waymo has nearly 200 million fully autonomous miles across 10+ cities, while General Motors' Super Cruise has 700 million supervised miles (plus Cruise data), planning eyes-off driving in 2028 on the Cadillac Escalade IQ. Tesla's miles are supervised with an attentive driver.
Tesla shares have risen 20.5% in the past six months (vs. industry 29.4%), trading at a forward P/S ratio of 14.41 with a Zacks Rank #4 (Sell).