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Tesla said on April 18-19, 2026 it has rolled out its robotaxi service to parts of Dallas and Houston, marking the electric-vehicle maker’s latest U.S. expansion after its initial Austin launch last year.
The company’s robotaxi account on X posted short videos and maps showing Model Y SUVs operating without a human driver or front-seat monitor in the two Texas cities, but disclosed no details on fleet size, pricing or exact service boundaries.
The move follows Tesla’s gradual removal of in-vehicle safety monitors after beginning unsupervised runs in Austin earlier this year.
Independent trackers report only a handful of active vehicles in the new markets so far.
Tesla’s expansion comes amid intensifying competition from Alphabet’s Waymo and Amazon-backed Zoox, and follows disclosures that Austin robotaxis were involved in 14 crashes since launch.
Tesla has said some vehicles may be remotely operated at times and regulatory approvals vary by state; the company has more limited, driver-backed ride services in the San Francisco Bay Area but lacks full autonomous taxi authorization in California.








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