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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-28

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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-28

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly|March 28, 20266 min read9.1AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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Waymo dominated headlines this week with its ridership surging tenfold in under two years, now surpassing 500,000 weekly paid trips — a stunning milestone that underscores the company's commanding lead in commercial robotaxi deployment. Meanwhile, California regulators officially confirmed Tesla's so-called "Robotaxi" service holds only a limousine permit with zero autonomous vehicle oversight, and the FAA's eVTOL pilot program targeting 26 states edged closer to a summer 2026 launch window.

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-28


🚗 Self-Driving Cars & Robotaxis

Waymo's ridership has surged tenfold in less than two years. According to a new chart published this week, Waymo's weekly paid robotaxi trips have increased 10x since the company began scaling its commercial service. The company now logs over 500,000 weekly rides and has crossed 4 million autonomous miles driven — metrics that delivery services, logistics firms, and transit agencies are tracking closely to gauge when AVs will disrupt their own sectors.

Chart showing Waymo's tenfold increase in weekly paid robotaxi trips over two years
Chart showing Waymo's tenfold increase in weekly paid robotaxi trips over two years

Police have taken the wheel of Waymo robotaxis at active crime scenes. A TechCrunch investigation found that first responders — including law enforcement — have had to manually take control of Waymo vehicles and physically move them during emergencies, including at least two active crime scenes. The revelations raise fresh questions about how fully autonomous vehicles interact with emergency services and what protocols exist when a driverless car becomes an obstacle in a high-stakes situation.

Police officer approaching a Waymo robotaxi during an emergency situation
Police officer approaching a Waymo robotaxi during an emergency situation

California's top regulator confirms Tesla is running a limo service, not a robotaxi. The California Public Utilities Commission's deputy executive director stated this week that Tesla's "Robotaxi" service in California operates under the same permit classification as a limousine company — meaning it is entirely exempt from the state's autonomous vehicle reporting and oversight requirements. The CPUC has zero visibility into Tesla's safety data for the service. The confirmation is a significant regulatory distinction as Tesla continues marketing its Full Self-Driving-based ride service to consumers.

Tesla vehicle on a road, illustrating the contrast between its marketing and regulatory classification
Tesla vehicle on a road, illustrating the contrast between its marketing and regulatory classification

Amazon's Zoox expands robotaxi footprint to Austin and Miami. Zoox announced it will debut robotaxis in Austin, Texas and Miami, Florida later this year — pending paid-ride approval — while simultaneously quadrupling its service area in San Francisco and adding more destinations in Las Vegas. The Amazon-backed company opened free rides to the public in parts of Las Vegas and San Francisco last year. Austin and Miami will mark its first expansion into new cities in 2026.

Zoox robotaxi vehicle on the road, representing its distinctive bidirectional design
Zoox robotaxi vehicle on the road, representing its distinctive bidirectional design

techcrunch.com

techcrunch.com

techcrunch.com

Waymo’s skyrocketing ridership in one chart | TechCrunch

evxl.co

evxl.co

techcrunch.com

NHTSA creates autonomous vehicle occupant safety standards


🚚 Autonomous Trucking & Logistics

No fresh autonomous trucking news crossed the verified-fresh threshold this week. All trucking-specific stories identified in research (Aurora, TuSimple, Waabi, etc.) carried publication dates prior to 2026-03-21 and have been excluded per freshness rules. The most recent relevant item — Volvo's Waabi partnership announcement — dates to February 2026 and has already been covered in prior issues.

Verified-fresh autonomous trucking data was not available for this coverage period. Check back next week.


🛩️ Drones & eVTOL

The FAA's eVTOL pilot program could put air taxis in the sky as early as summer 2026. Fox News reported this week that the FAA's eVTOL Integration Pilot Program (eIPP) — which selected 8 proposals to test electric aircraft in 26 states — is on track for commercial flights this summer. The program spans passenger, cargo, and medical flight scenarios, with autonomous air taxi operations potentially included. Companies such as Joby Aviation and Archer Aviation are among those participating in the broader initiative.

Air taxi eVTOL aircraft in flight, representing the FAA's nationwide pilot program
Air taxi eVTOL aircraft in flight, representing the FAA's nationwide pilot program

Joby Aviation extends its FAA lead with Florida eVTOL pilots. A market analysis published on March 23 noted that Joby Aviation's stock gained a tailwind as Florida air taxi pilots expanded the FAA's eVTOL program. The report frames Joby as holding a meaningful lead over rival Archer Aviation in terms of FAA certification progress and operational timeline. Joby's recent Golden Gate Flight demonstration was cited as a key milestone positioning it as the sector leader heading toward commercial launch.


📋 Regulation & Policy

California regulator draws a hard line: Tesla's FSD rides are not an autonomous vehicle service. Beyond the competitive implications (covered above in the robotaxi section), the CPUC confirmation carries direct regulatory weight. Because Tesla holds only a limousine/charter permit, it is not subject to California's Autonomous Vehicle Deployment regulations — meaning the state collects no incident data, no disengagement reports, and has no formal oversight mechanism for Tesla's commercial FSD ride service. Critics argue this creates a significant public-safety accountability gap.

The FAA's eVTOL Integration Pilot Program moves toward summer deployment. On the federal regulatory front, the Department of Transportation and FAA's selection of 8 eVTOL projects across 26 states represents a meaningful acceleration of the regulatory pathway for advanced air mobility. The program is designed to generate real-world operational data that will feed into future FAA rulemaking. Autonomous cargo flights under the program could begin as early as summer 2026, according to reporting this week, making this one of the most significant near-term regulatory milestones in the aerial autonomy space.


📊 Analysis: The Race This Week

This week's news crystallized the gulf between genuine commercial AV operations and aspirational narratives.

Waymo continued to pull decisively ahead of the field. A tenfold ridership increase in under two years — now at 500,000+ weekly rides — is no longer a startup metric; it's a scaling commercial business. The emergency-response incident reporting is worth watching, but it reflects the realities of operating at scale in dense urban environments, not a systemic safety failure.

Zoox made its boldest geographic move yet, announcing Austin and Miami expansion while quadrupling its San Francisco footprint. Still operating on free or pre-commercial terms pending paid-ride permits, Zoox is clearly building toward a broader monetized service — but remains well behind Waymo in ride volume and geographic reach.

Tesla suffered a reputational hit from the CPUC confirmation. The regulatory revelation doesn't prevent Tesla from operating its FSD-based ride service, but it strips away the "robotaxi" branding in a factual, official sense. More importantly, the absence of any AV regulatory oversight means Tesla's commercial FSD rides exist in a reporting black hole — a distinction that regulators, insurers, and competitors will likely continue to highlight.

In the eVTOL sector, the FAA's summer 2026 timeline for its 26-state pilot program is the week's most consequential development. Joby's strengthening FAA lead over Archer suggests the commercial air taxi race may have a clearer front-runner than the ground-based robotaxi contest.


👀 What to Watch Next

  1. Zoox's paid-ride permit applications in Austin and Miami. The company has announced its intent to launch in both cities but is still awaiting commercial ride approval. Watch for permit filings with Texas and Florida regulators — the timing will determine whether Zoox can generate meaningful revenue in 2026.

  2. FAA eVTOL summer launch milestones. With the eIPP targeting summer 2026 for initial commercial flights, the coming weeks should bring more specific launch dates, operational routes, and safety framework announcements from participating companies including Joby and Archer. Any FAA type certification progress from either company would be a major catalyst.

  3. Tesla's regulatory response to the CPUC classification. With California officially categorizing Tesla's ride service as a limo operation, the question is whether Tesla will seek an AV deployment permit (which would subject it to reporting requirements) or continue operating under the existing structure. A response from Tesla or regulatory escalation from advocacy groups is likely in the coming weeks.

  4. Waymo's next ridership and safety data release. With weekly rides now exceeding 500,000 and cumulative miles in the millions, the next formal safety report or ridership update from Waymo will set the benchmark for the entire industry. Any data on cost per ride, profitability metrics, or geographic expansion plans would sharpen the competitive picture significantly.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

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