Autonomous Vehicles
Tesla Robotaxi Fleet Dwarfed by Waymo: Just 42 Cars in Texas
Tesla has just 42 autonomous vehicles authorized for driverless ridehailing in Texas, less than one‑tenth of Waymo's 577, according to new state DMV filings. The data, released as a new Texas AV oversight law took effect, reveals the gap between Tesla's robotaxi ambitions and its operational reality.
The Numbers Gap
Tesla has registered just 42 automated vehicles in its driverless Robotaxi service in Texas, a fleet less than one‑tenth the size of Waymo's 577 authorized vehicles in the state, according to new filings published by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles on May 28, CNBC reported. The data was released as a new Texas law took effect giving the state greater oversight of commercial driverless vehicle operators.
Tesla also trails AV Ride, which has 317 automated vehicles authorized in the state, while Amazon's Zoox had 35. Waymo, Alphabet's self‑driving unit, has a commercial fleet of close to 4,000 vehicles across the U.S. and is rapidly expanding its paid service to new markets. Tesla has been operating its Robotaxi‑branded service in Texas since June 2025 but has not previously disclosed details about its fleet size.
- Tesla Robotaxi 42 vehicles authorized in Texas
- Waymo 577 vehicles in Texas, ~4,000 across the U.S.
- AV Ride 317 vehicles authorized in Texas
- Zoox (Amazon) 35 vehicles authorized in Texas
New Texas Oversight
The new Texas law requires operators of driverless vehicles to self‑certify that their AVs are Level 4 autonomous, per SAE standards — meaning they can operate in normal weather on typical roads without a human driver. Waymo has long counted its robotaxis as Level 4, but Tesla has historically told regulators that most of its cars feature Level 2 driver assistance systems, CNBC noted. The company has not disclosed how it came to self‑certify its Robotaxi vehicles as Level 4 under the new law.
Tesla's Austin fleet experienced 17 known incidents between July 2025 and April 2026, according to NHTSA filings. Two of those incidents involved minor injuries, with one requiring hospitalization. All occurred while human safety supervisors were on board. The fleet data was also covered by.2
Elon's Big Bet vs. Reality
Tesla is counting on driverless cars to fuel much of its future growth as the company faces increased competition in the electric vehicle market and as CEO Elon Musk tries to position Tesla at the forefront of AI and robotics, CNBC reported. But the 42‑vehicle fleet represents a fraction of what Tesla and Musk have previously projected.
Tesla has filed for driverless testing permits in Arizona, Nevada, and Florida but has yet to begin paid driverless rides in those states. Waymo, by contrast, just opened its Ojai robotaxis to select riders as it works to lower the cost of fleet expansion. The new Texas DMV database makes it clear: in the autonomous ridehailing race, Waymo is operating at a fundamentally different scale.
What This Means for AI Builders
The Tesla‑Waymo gap is more than a business story — it's a case study in how different approaches to AI deployment play out in the real world. Waymo's methodical, geofenced, sensor‑heavy approach has produced a commercial fleet thousands strong. Tesla's vision‑only, camera‑based approach, sold as more scalable, has produced 42 vehicles in nearly a year of operation.
For AI builders, the lesson is about deployment realism versus technical ambition. Tesla's approach may prove superior in the long run — a vision‑only system that works everywhere beats a lidar‑stacked system that works in limited areas. But in the short run, shipping beats promising. Waymo has 577 cars on Texas roads today. Tesla has 42. The new Texas law, by making these numbers public, forces the autonomous vehicle industry to be judged on results, not roadmaps.
Tesla's Broader AI Ambitions
Tesla's robotaxi struggles arrive at a complicated moment for the company's broader AI narrative. CEO Elon Musk has positioned Tesla as an AI and robotics company as much as a carmaker, and the Robotaxi service was supposed to be the proof point. Instead, the 42‑vehicle fleet reveals a gap between Musk's projections and operational delivery that parallels SpaceX's recent IPO disclosure about the Colossus compute deal with Anthropic, CNBC reported.
The new Texas transparency law may accelerate pressure on Tesla to show results. With fleet sizes now public, investors and regulators can track exactly how Tesla's autonomous ambitions translate into vehicles on the road — not just presentations about what's coming next.
Sources
May 29, 2026
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