Tesla Just Got A Big Texas Advantage For Its Driverless Taxi Rollout
Proper Legislation
One unique aspect of the United States is that each state can implement its own laws and rules. This has given brands the opportunity to offer a range of products and services as long as they adhere to the rules and regulations.
This has played a significant role in the implementation of new transport and automotive services, particularly self-driving taxis, which can drive themselves. Some states, like California, Arizona, and Nevada, already had legislation allowing self-driving taxis; a new state has just joined in, giving autonomous driving advocates Tesla a huge advantage for their Robotaxi program.
Texas Goes For Robotaxis
Tesla CEO Elon Musk noted during a meeting with investors that Tesla would pause its Robotaxi program until the carmaker's Fully Self-Driving Version 15 is ready. Yet they continued to build the Cybercab, which, for a time, sat idle in lots across Texas awaiting operational use.
This past week, Tesla investor James Stephenson noticed that the brand was now listed in the Texas Motor Carrier Credentialing System as an automated vehicle operator. In the filing, Tesla included 42 Model Ys, which were approved the same day Texas updated its autonomous driving law. In effect, it seems Tesla has taken this chance offered by the law to self-certify its vehicles.
Under the new law, companies like Tesla that offer SAE Level 4 or higher autonomous cars are now legally allowed to offer people commercial driverless transportation across the state of Texas. The only condition now is that the self-driving features and technology comply with state and federal safety regulations. This is a much simpler system compared to the more stringent regulations that were once in place.
Driverless Paid Rides
The new level 4 certification allows Tesla to properly roll out paid taxi rides without drivers or operators in the vehicle. Simply put, these level 4 vehicles can drive themselves, provided that the operational design domain conditions are met, including geofencing, prevailing weather conditions, and other factors.
At the moment, the Model Y is the only certified model under the new law, but this now gives Tesla a chance to secure proper legal operational certification for the purpose-built Cybercab.
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This story was originally published June 1, 2026 at 10:15 AM.