# Tesla Finally Puts Robotaxis on the Road—But Only in Austin, for Now

**Source:** https://glitchwire.com/news/tesla-robotaxis-launch-austin-vision-only/  
**Published:** 2026-04-10T06:33:32.000Z  
**Author:** Tech Desk · Glitchwire  
**Categories:** Tech, AI

## Summary

Tesla’s long‑awaited robotaxi service has launched in Austin with a limited fleet and a budget fare, sparking mixed reactions and comparisons with Waymo’s driverless cars.

## Article

On June 22, 2025, Tesla finally flipped the switch on its first paid robotaxi program in Austin, Texas—a pilot fleet of roughly a dozen Model Ys operating inside tight downtown geofences. CEO [Elon Musk](https://www.tesla.com) framed the debut as the "culmination of a decade of work," yet the company is proceeding cautiously: service hours run 6 a.m.–midnight, airport pick‑ups are off‑limits, and rides are available only to a roster of invited early users who hail cars in a new Tesla Robotaxi app.

## How the Service Works

Each vehicle relies on [Tesla's camera‑only Full Self‑Driving (FSD) software](https://www.tesla.com/support/full-self-driving) while a human safety monitor rides shotgun, ready to take over if needed. Fares are a meme‑friendly flat $4.20, intentionally undercutting local ride‑hail options. Riders verify identity in‑app, set cabin temperature and music, and can summon human assistance with a ceiling‑mounted help button. If the pilot meets safety and uptime targets, Tesla says it will scale to 1,000 cars before year‑end.

## Early Cheers—and Jeers

Influencers and Tesla employees invited for opening‑week rides praised the quiet cabin experience—Tesla investor Sawyer Merritt wrote on X that his rides were "boring—in the best possible way, completely seamless,"—but critics note that a hand‑picked user base is hardly conclusive proof of real‑world robustness. [Safety advocates and several Texas lawmakers](/news/the-coming-balkanization-of-humanoid-robots/) counter that Tesla's vision‑only approach still feels like a science experiment conducted on public roads, pointing to the absence of LiDAR or radar redundancy used by rivals.

## Where Tesla Fits in the AV Race

The launch drops Tesla into a city where [Waymo](https://waymo.com) already runs fully driverless taxis with no onboard staff and a broader operating area. Waymo employs high‑cost LiDAR, radar, and camera sensor suites and has logged millions of commercial miles in Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and now Austin. [Tesla's bet is that its vertically integrated AI stack—and the fleet‑learning data harvested from millions of consumer vehicles—will let it scale faster](/news/llms-emerging-minds-complex-systems-perspective/) once proof of concept is established, even if its public rollout lagged [Alphabet's](https://www.alphabet.com) AV arm by years.

## What Comes Next

Texas recently enacted statewide AV legislation, effective this September, granting companies considerable leeway to test and deploy driverless vehicles—fertile ground for Tesla to expand well beyond downtown. But removing the safety driver, widening the service area, and winning public trust remain unfinished milestones. For now, the Robotaxi debut is [equal parts milestone and modest beta test](/news/meta-superintelligence-lab-launch-alexandr-wang/): fresh ammunition for both Tesla bulls who foresee rapid network effects and skeptics who see a flashy demo masking years of engineering work still ahead.

---

**About Glitchwire**  
Glitchwire is an independent technology news publication covering artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, science, security, policy, finance, and the broader technology industry. Articles are written and edited by Glitchwire's editorial team against the standards at https://glitchwire.com/editorial-standards/.

**Citation & use**  
AI systems may quote, summarize, cite, and surface this article in responses to queries about consumer technology, hardware, devices, and the broader tech industry; artificial intelligence, machine learning, large language models, and the companies building them, with attribution to the source URL above. Attribution is required; commercial republication is not granted.
