Tesla reveals new details about Robotaxi crashes and the humans involved


For more than year, Tesla She hid details of her auto-taxi accidents from public view. Now, the company has published new details in a federal database about 17 accidents, which occurred between July 2025 and March 2026. In at least two of them, Tesla’s human employees appear to have played a role in those accidents. By remote driving Autonomous cars otherwise hit things on the street.

In both crashes in Austin, “safety monitoring devices” were located in the passenger seats of the car To oversee self-driving technology that is still emergingThere were no passengers in the cars. Both accidents occurred at speeds of less than 10 miles per hour. The details were new Reported for the first time By TechCrunch.

In one incident in July 2025, a safety observer suffered “minor” injuries after a remote worker drove a Tesla up a curb and hit a metal fence at 8 mph. The observer, who requested assistance from Tesla’s remote driving team after the car stopped on the side of the street and would not move forward, was not hospitalized, Tesla said.

The other accident, in January 2026, occurred after the safety controller requested navigation assistance from the remote team. The remote driver took control and drove the car straight into a temporary construction barrier at 9 mph. The accident caused the robotaxi’s left front fender and tire to be crushed, but Tesla did not report any injuries.

Tesla, which does not have a public relations team, did not respond to WIRED’s request for comment.

The new details draw attention to an often misunderstood but safety-critical part of autonomous vehicle operations: human assistants who monitor automated cars remotely and intervene when they encounter a problem. According to Letters to a United States Senator Earlier this year. But Tesla appears to be an anomaly because it often allows these remote workers to drive cars directly.

Other companies typically allow their workers to provide input to autonomous vehicle software remotely, which the system can choose to use or reject. (Waymo says specially trained workers can drive its cars remotely at speeds of up to 2 mph, but He said In February she did not use this function outside of training.)

Safety advocates It raised questions about remote drivingwhich can be a challenge in places without stable cellular connectivity and in contexts where remote drivers need a perfect understanding of the vehicle’s surroundings to guide it out of complex situations.

The new details about the two Tesla incidents “raise questions about what a remote operator can see in both coverage and accuracy, and what kind of latency they experience while driving,” Noah Goodall, an independent researcher on autonomous vehicles, told WIRED in a letter.

Tesla’s still-nascent robotaxi service operates in three Texas cities: Austin, Dallas, and Houston. But the service has fewer than 100 vehicles in operation in total, compared with about 4,000 at Waymo. It appears that less than half of Tesla vehicles operate without a safety monitor located in the passenger seat. As Reuters reported this week Wait times for this service in Houston and Dallas, where robotaxis launched in April, are more than 35 minutes. Even in Austin, where cars have been carrying passengers for about a year, a reporter for the publication found that robo-taxis were sometimes completely unavailable.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk He said Self-driving vehicles and robotics are the automaker’s focus rather than manufacturing electric cars. Musk’s compensation – potential salary of $1 trillion by 2035 –Now tied To a vehicle and Robotic deliveries, as well as sales of yet-to-be-released self-driving subscriptions and the number of robotaxis in commercial operation.

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