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WASHINGTON, May 7-8 (Reuters and industry reporting) - The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said the 2026 Tesla Model Y is the first vehicle to pass its newly added advanced driver-assistance system (ADAS) tests in the agency’s New Car Assessment Program.
Model Y units built on or after Nov. 12, 2025 successfully met eight evaluations: four legacy driver-assistance criteria and four new pass/fail measures covering pedestrian automatic emergency braking, lane-keeping assistance, blind-spot warning and blind-spot intervention.
NHTSA approved the updated NCAP ADAS criteria in November 2024 to take effect for the 2026 model year; some implementation timing was later adjusted, and Tesla voluntarily submitted the Model Y ahead of many rivals.
Separately, NHTSA is pursuing investigations into Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) software.
An engineering analysis opened in March 2026 covers roughly 3.2 million Tesla vehicles and examines crashes in which FSD allegedly failed to detect common visibility-impairing roadway conditions, a step that can precede a recall.
🔗 Based On
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