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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-29

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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-29

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly|March 29, 20267 min read9.1AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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Waymo's robotaxi service continues its meteoric rise, now handling 500,000 paid rides per week — a tenfold increase in under two years — cementing its position as the clear market leader in autonomous passenger transport. Meanwhile, the broader AV ecosystem is accelerating rapidly, with Zoox eyeing Austin and Miami expansions, Tesla's California "robotaxi" facing regulatory scrutiny, and the FAA's new eVTOL pilot program potentially putting air taxis in the skies of 26 states as early as this summer.

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-03-29


🚗 Self-Driving Cars & Robotaxis

Waymo's Ride Count Hits 500,000 Weekly — Up 10x in Under Two Years

Waymo's paid robotaxi trips have surged to 500,000 per week across the U.S., a tenfold increase achieved in less than two years. The milestone underscores Waymo's dominance in the commercial robotaxi market and its growing operational footprint across San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles, and Austin. Delivery services, logistics companies, and public transit agencies are closely watching Waymo's trajectory as a signal for when autonomous vehicles will begin disrupting their sectors.

Waymo ridership growth chart showing tenfold increase in weekly paid trips over under two years
Waymo ridership growth chart showing tenfold increase in weekly paid trips over under two years

Police and First Responders Gaining Physical Control of Waymo Vehicles in Emergencies

A TechCrunch investigation found that first responders — including police officers — have had to physically take control of Waymo robotaxis and move them during emergency situations. The incidents include at least two active crime scenes where law enforcement needed to clear a Waymo vehicle from the area. The report raises fresh questions about how driverless vehicles interact with emergency services protocols, and what tools responders need when an AV cannot safely move on its own.

Police officer next to a Waymo robotaxi in an emergency situation
Police officer next to a Waymo robotaxi in an emergency situation

California Regulator Confirms Tesla's "Robotaxi" Operates Under a Limo Permit — Not as an AV Service

California's Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) deputy executive director confirmed that Tesla's so-called "Robotaxi" service in California holds only a chauffeur/limousine permit — the same type used by limo companies — and is entirely exempt from the state's autonomous vehicle reporting requirements. The CPUC stated Tesla is "not operating an autonomous vehicle service" under California's regulatory framework. This means Tesla's rides face zero AV oversight, operating in a regulatory category that does not require the safety reporting mandated for true robotaxi operators like Waymo.

Zoox Targets Austin and Miami for Robotaxi Expansion

Amazon's Zoox self-driving unit announced plans to debut its purpose-built robotaxis in Austin, Texas, and Miami later this year, while also expanding operations in San Francisco and Las Vegas where it already offers public rides. The expansion marks the latest growth push for Zoox, which opened rides to the public in select areas of Las Vegas and San Francisco last year. Paid-ride approval is still pending in the new cities.

Zoox autonomous robotaxi vehicle on public roads
Zoox autonomous robotaxi vehicle on public roads

techcrunch.com

Waymo’s skyrocketing ridership in one chart | TechCrunch

techcrunch.com

techcrunch.com

techcrunch.com

NHTSA creates autonomous vehicle occupant safety standards


🚚 Autonomous Trucking & Logistics

No Recent Data Available for This Section This Week

No fresh autonomous trucking or logistics stories from sources dated after 2026-03-22 were available in this week's research results. Coverage of Aurora, Kodiak, Gatik, Nuro, or TuSimple will resume when new developments emerge.

Note to readers: The Uber–Rivian robotaxi deal (50,000 autonomous R2 vehicles) and Waabi's $750M Series C with Uber were covered in previous issues dated before this week's cutoff.


🛩️ Drones & eVTOL

FAA eVTOL Pilot Program Could Launch Commercial Flights Across 26 States This Summer

A new federal eVTOL Integration Pilot Program (eIPP), backed by the DOT and FAA, has selected eight proposals for testing electric air taxis, cargo drones, and hybrid-electric aircraft across 26 states. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy unveiled the Advanced Air Mobility program, which targets passenger, cargo, and medical flights — with autonomous air taxi operations potentially launching as early as summer 2026. The program includes participants such as Archer Aviation, Joby Aviation, and Reliable Robotics.

Air taxi aircraft featured in the FAA eVTOL pilot program announcement
Air taxi aircraft featured in the FAA eVTOL pilot program announcement

Forbes: Federal Tailwind Accelerating Air Taxis and Cargo Drones

A Forbes analysis published March 22 highlights that the new FAA/DOT eVTOL program is creating meaningful regulatory momentum for electric aircraft. The piece notes the federal program could allow cargo-carrying drones and air taxis to enter live commercial airspace by summer, with the eight selected projects spanning a wide geographic footprint across the U.S. The analysis frames the federal program as a critical inflection point for the advanced air mobility sector.


📋 Regulation & Policy

California CPUC Draws a Sharp Line: Tesla's Service Is Not AV-Regulated

The California Public Utilities Commission's public confirmation this week that Tesla operates under a limousine permit — not an autonomous vehicle permit — has broad implications for how regulators categorize ride-hailing services that use advanced driver-assistance technology. While Tesla markets its service as a "Robotaxi," it faces none of the safety data reporting, incident disclosure, or permit requirements that apply to companies like Waymo operating under California's AV framework. This regulatory gap is drawing increased scrutiny from safety advocates.

FAA Formalizes eVTOL Integration Path with 8-Project Pilot Program Across 26 States

The FAA's selection of eight proposals for its eVTOL Integration Pilot Program represents one of the most significant regulatory milestones for Advanced Air Mobility in the U.S. to date. The program is designed to test electric aircraft in real-world commercial airspace, creating a structured pathway toward full certification. Notably, autonomous cargo operations are explicitly within scope, potentially launching before piloted passenger services. The DOT framing positions this as an acceleration mechanism rather than a gating process.


📊 Analysis: The Race This Week

This week's news reinforces a widening operational and regulatory gap between Waymo and the rest of the field.

Waymo pulls further ahead. The 500,000 weekly rides milestone — achieved in under two years from a much smaller base — signals genuine consumer adoption, not just a pilot program. The company now has the data flywheel, brand recognition, and city permits that others are still chasing. The emergency responder issue is a real-world friction point, but one that Waymo is uniquely positioned to address given its scale; every incident generates learnings that refine protocols.

Tesla's regulatory situation is a liability, not an asset. The CPUC's confirmation that Tesla operates as a limo company — not an AV operator — cuts both ways. Tesla avoids onerous AV reporting requirements in the short term, but it also means the company has no regulatory standing to point to when claiming it operates autonomous vehicles in California. For investors and partners watching for a credible robotaxi deployment, this week's disclosure is a setback.

Zoox is the most credible challenger near-term. With Amazon's backing and a purpose-built vehicle (no steering wheel, bidirectional travel), Zoox's expansion into Austin and Miami marks a deliberate, city-by-city scaling strategy. It lacks Waymo's ride volume, but it has a hardware advantage in terms of interior passenger experience.

The eVTOL sector is entering a new phase. The FAA's eIPP program isn't just a study — it's an operational testing mandate in live airspace across 26 states. With Joby and Archer both in the certification stretch, a summer 2026 commercial launch window for at least cargo or limited passenger service is now plausible rather than aspirational.


👀 What to Watch Next

  1. Waymo's next city announcement. With 500,000 weekly rides and a clear scaling playbook, Waymo is widely expected to announce a new city or a major expansion of its existing service area. Watch for news from Miami, Washington D.C., or international markets.

  2. Tesla's regulatory response in California. Following the CPUC confirmation, Tesla faces a choice: continue operating as a limo service (limiting credibility as an AV company), or apply for California's AV deployment permit (which requires full safety reporting). Any move on this front would be a major signal.

  3. Zoox paid-ride approval in Austin and Miami. Zoox has announced testing plans, but converting testing to paid rides requires state and city permits. The timeline for ride-hailing approval in both cities will determine whether Zoox can generate meaningful revenue in 2026.

  4. First commercial eVTOL operation under the FAA eIPP. The program targets a summer 2026 launch window. Watch for which of the eight selected proposals — particularly Reliable Robotics (autonomous cargo) or Archer/Joby (passenger) — is first to complete a revenue-generating flight under the new framework. This would mark the true commercial debut of U.S. air mobility.

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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