When Will Musk’s Robotaxis Actually Arrive?

The key moment during the Tesla Inc. robotaxi event Thursday night came when a member of the audience interrupted Chief Executive Elon Musk’s spiel about the benefits of autonomous vehicles. He had just opined about Airbnb-like fleets of money-earning robotaxis that you could care for like a shepherd tends their flock — stirring stuff, this — presaging “a glorious future” when someone shouted: “When will they be available?”

Musk’s response was interesting. He began by saying that Tesla expects “fully autonomous, unsupervised” Full Self-Driving to be deployed in California and Texas next year. As a reminder, the curiously named FSD is actually an advanced driver assistance feature that requires you to be alert and holding the steering wheel. Musk specified this rollout would involve the Models 3 and Y.

That rather raised the question about all the other models Tesla sells that are supposedly on the cusp of autonomy. A minute or two later, Musk then almost casually included “and the Model S and X, too!” Then someone chimed in: “What about the Cybertruck?” So Musk duly also included that one before upping the ante to “all cars that we make.” When that drew further questions about whether this applied to different hardware generations on existing Teslas, Musk brushed them off with a laugh and a “let’s not get nuanced here.”

Or maybe let’s? I’m all for audience participation, but given that the question of when Tesla will actually produce working robotaxis has been out there for at least five years, this all came across as a bit improvised. It didn’t help that a CEO prepared to while away two hours spitballing with former President Donald Trump on X only had about 20 minutes worth of stuff to say about a vaunted revolution in transportation.