Zoox updates map a robotaxi rollout; ramping production to 100 vehicles a week as it expands service in the U.S.
Several firms have announced expansion plans and new measures that will accelerate commercial robotaxi rollouts. Mobileye has announced a 2027 U.S. launch with an initial 100-vehicle fleet and a five-year target of 17,000; Wayve and Uber are preparing a supervised London service in the coming months; Tesla and Waymo are expanding U.S. coverage; and new indices show Chinese robotaxi players are scaling faster than many expected.
Waymo has launched Waymo Premier, a $29.99-per-month membership offering priority pickups, up to five free cancellations monthly, and 10% Waymo Cash back for trips. The program is initially invite-only in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Phoenix, with plans to broaden to additional cities as it presses expansion and pursues higher-value riders.
Federal and local investigators have opened probes after a Tesla Model 3 drove across a Katy, Texas, lawn and crashed into a home on 19 June, killing 76‑year‑old Martha Avila. The driver, Michael Butler, has been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and remains jailed on $150,000 bond; the victim’s family has filed a wrongful‑death suit naming Tesla and Butler.
Zoox has unveiled interior and interface improvements to its bidirectional robotaxi as it eyes a wider rollout later this year, including a lighter interior, new seating, larger cupholders, improved touchscreens, and two-way audio for riders and first responders. Production is planned at the Hayward facility with up to 100 vehicles weekly pending regulatory approval.
SpaceX’s debut has sparked a wave of investor interest, but early gains have cooled as post-IPO volatility declines and market enthusiasm faces valuation questions amid AI hype.
Federal and local probes have produced new findings and warnings about autonomous vehicles. The NTSB has reported that a Tesla driver manually overrode Full Self-Driving before a June crash that killed a 76‑year‑old in Katy, Texas. NHTSA has issued a directive demanding AV developers fix cases where driverless cars enter or block emergency scenes; Waymo and California regulators are under pressure over several incidents.
Waymo has announced the expansion of its driverless robotaxi fleet to four new U.S. cities, starting with employee rides before opening to the public. The Ojai vehicle is introduced as a comfort-focused option, with expansion plans across San Diego, Las Vegas, Tampa, and Denver. The rollout faces regulatory approvals and past safety incidents.
Zoox has recalled 105 robotaxi vehicles after incidents where cars could not detect heavy smoke at active emergency scenes. A software update is being rolled out, following a June 20 incident in Las Vegas where a robotaxi braked and reversed as first responders moved to cordon off the scene. NHTSA is seeking solutions from AV developers, citing a pattern of interference with first responders.
San Francisco leaders are pushing for statewide standards to ensure autonomous vehicles can handle major disruptions, citing recent incidents where robotaxis halted traffic and stranded riders. The move signals a shift from voluntary commitments to mandatory performance requirements as regulators seek real-time data sharing and rapid vehicle clearance during emergencies.