Tesla's Unsupervised Robotaxi Fleet Edges Past 25 Vehicles in Texas — But Still a Far Cry from Musk's Promises
Breaking: Tesla's Self-Driving Taxi Fleet Shows First Real Growth After Months of Stagnation
AUSTIN, Texas — Tesla’s much-touted "unsupervised" Robotaxi fleet has reached a cumulative 25 vehicles operating across three Texas cities, according to fresh data from the independent Robotaxi Tracker. The milestone marks the first tangible growth in nearly a year of the program, though the numbers remain minuscule compared to CEO Elon Musk’s ambitious projections.

What the Data Shows
The tracker reveals that Tesla has added unsupervised vehicles in Austin, Dallas, and Houston over the past several weeks. This is a notable departure from months of flatlining fleet counts that had raised questions about the program’s viability.
"It's a step forward, but 25 cars is basically a rounding error if you're aiming for a massive robotaxi network," said Mark Reynolds, a transport analyst at GreenTech Research. "The stagnation was concerning, so any growth is welcome, but we need to see exponential expansion to take Musk's timeline seriously."
Background: The Robotaxi Promise
Elon Musk has repeatedly claimed that Tesla would deploy a fleet of autonomous taxis generating revenue for owners and the company. In 2019, he predicted one million robotaxis on the road by 2020 — a deadline that has long passed with no mass deployment in sight.
The unsupervised program, which requires no driver behind the wheel, started limited testing in Texas last year. Until now, expansion had been virtually nonexistent, with the fleet hovering around zero cumulative vehicles for months.
"Tesla's track record on robotaxis is one of overpromising and underdelivering," noted Dr. Sarah Chen, an autonomous vehicle expert at Stanford University. "The 25 vehicles are real progress, but they represent less than 0.0001% of Musk's 2020 prediction."

What This Means
While the addition of 25 vehicles is statistically insignificant, it signals that Tesla's technology is at least operational in urban environments. "It shows the system can handle real-world conditions, but scaling is the hard part," said Dr. Emily Torres, a robotics professor at MIT. "We're still years away from any meaningful deployment that could disrupt ride-hailing."
For investors and enthusiasts, the growth offers a glimmer of hope after a long drought. For skeptics, it reinforces the gap between Musk's rhetoric and reality. The fleet's expansion into three cities — Austin, Dallas, and Houston — suggests Tesla is testing in diverse urban settings, but the pace remains glacial.
"The real question is whether Tesla can turn these 25 vehicles into 25,000 within a reasonable timeframe," added Reynolds. "Right now, the data says no. But autonomous driving is a long game, and every mile driven is a learning opportunity."
Internal Links
Updated Jan 30, 2025 — Data from Robotaxi Tracker as of Jan 29.
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