Tesla ‘Robotaxi’ adds 5 more crashes in Austin in a month — 4x worse than humans

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Tesla has reported five new crashes involving its “Robotaxi” fleet in Austin, Texas, bringing the total to 14 incidents since the service launched in June 2025. The newly filed NHTSA data also reveals that Tesla quietly upgraded one earlier crash to include a hospitalization injury, something the company never disclosed publicly.

The new data comes from the latest update to NHTSA’s Standing General Order (SGO) incident report database for automated driving systems (ADS). We have been tracking Tesla’s Robotaxi crash data closely, and the trend is not improving.

5 new crashes in December and January

Tesla submitted five new crash reports in January 2026, covering incidents from December 2025 and January 2026. All five involved Model Y vehicles operating with the autonomous driving system “verified engaged” in Austin.

The new crashes include a collision with a fixed object at 17 mph while the vehicle was driving straight, a crash with a bus while the Tesla was stationary, a collision with a heavy truck at 4 mph, and two separate incidents where the Tesla backed into objects, one into a pole or tree at 1 mph and another into a fixed object at 2 mph.

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As with every previous Tesla crash in the database, all five new incident narratives are fully redacted as “confidential business information.” Tesla remains the only ADS operator to systematically hide crash details from the public through NHTSA’s confidentiality provisions. Waymo, Zoox, and every other company in the database provide full narrative descriptions of their incidents.

Tesla quietly upgraded a July crash to include hospitalization

Buried in the updated data is a revised report for a July 2025 crash (Report ID 13781-11375) that Tesla originally filed as “property damage only.” In December 2025, Tesla submitted a third version of that report upgrading the injury severity to “Minor W/ Hospitalization.”

This means someone involved in a Tesla “Robotaxi” crash required hospital treatment. The original crash involved a right turn collision with an SUV at 2 mph. Tesla’s delayed admission of hospitalization, five months after the incident, raises more questions about its crash reporting, which is already heavily redacted.

Crash rate keeps getting worse

With 14 crashes now on the books, Tesla’s “Robotaxi” crash rate in Austin continues to deteriorate. Extrapolating from Tesla’s Q4 2025 earnings mileage data, which showed roughly 700,000 cumulative paid miles through November, the fleet likely reached around 800,000 miles by mid-January 2026. That works out to one crash every 57,000 miles.

The irony is that Tesla’s own numbers condemn it. Tesla’s Vehicle Safety Report claims the average American driver experiences a minor collision every 229,000 miles and a major collision every 699,000 miles. By Tesla’s own benchmark, its “Robotaxi” fleet is crashing nearly 4 times more often than what the company says is normal for a regular human driver in a minor collision, and virtually every single one of these miles was driven with a trained safety monitor in the vehicle who could intervene at any moment, which means they likely prevented more crashes that Tesla’s system wouldn’t have avoided.

Using NHTSA’s broader police-reported crash average of roughly one per 500,000 miles, the picture is even worse, Tesla’s fleet is crashing at approximately 8 times the human rate.

Meanwhile, Waymo has logged over 127 million fully driverless miles, with no safety driver, no monitor, no chase car, and independent research shows Waymo reduces injury-causing crashes by 80% and serious-injury crashes by 91% compared to human drivers. Waymo reports 51 incidents in Austin alone in this same NHTSA database, but its fleet has driven orders of magnitude more miles in the city than Tesla’s supervised “robotaxis.”

Here’s a full list of Tesla’s ADS crashes related to the Austin Robotaxi service:

# Date Speed Crash With Movement Injury Severity Submitted New?
1 Jul 2025 2 mph SUV Right Turn Minor W/ Hospitalization* Aug 2025
2 Jul 2025 0 mph SUV Stopped Property Damage Aug 2025
3 Jul 2025 8 mph Fixed Object Other Minor W/O Hospitalization Aug 2025
4 Sep 2025 6 mph Fixed Object Left Turn Property Damage Sep 2025
5 Sep 2025 6 mph Passenger Car Straight Property Damage Sep 2025
6 Sep 2025 0 mph Cyclist Stopped Property Damage Sep 2025
7 Sep 2025 27 mph Animal Stopped No Injury Reported Oct 2025
8 Oct 2025 18 mph Other Straight Property Damage Dec 2025
9 Nov 2025 0 mph Other Stopped No Injury Reported Nov 2025
10 Dec 2025 17 mph Fixed Object Straight Property Damage Jan 2026 Yes
11 Jan 2026 4 mph Heavy Truck Straight Property Damage Jan 2026 Yes
12 Jan 2026 0 mph Bus Stopped Property Damage Jan 2026 Yes
13 Jan 2026 2 mph Fixed Object Backing Property Damage Jan 2026 Yes
14 Jan 2026 1 mph Pole / Tree Backing Property Damage Jan 2026 Yes

Electrek’s Take

We keep updating this story because the data keeps getting worse. Five more crashes, a quietly upgraded hospitalization, and total narrative redaction across the board, all from a company that claims its autonomous driving system is safer than humans.

Tesla fans and shareholders hold on to the thought that the company’s robotaxis are not responsible for some of these crashes, which is true, even though that’s much harder to determine with Tesla redacting the crash narrative on all crashes, but the problem is that even Tesla’s own benchmark shows humans have fewer crashes.

The 14 crashes over roughly 800,000 miles yield a crash rate of one crash every 57,000 miles. Tesla’s own safety data indicate that a typical human driver has a minor collision every 229,000 miles, whether or not they are at fault.

By the company’s own numbers, its “Robotaxi” fleet crashes nearly 4 times more often than a normal driver, and every single one of those miles had a safety monitor who could hit the kill switch. That is not a rounding error or an early-program hiccup. It is a fundamental performance gap.

What makes this especially frustrating is the lack of transparency. Every other ADS company in the NHTSA database, Waymo, Zoox, Aurora, Nuro, provides detailed narratives explaining what happened in each crash. Tesla redacts everything. We cannot independently assess whether Tesla’s system was at fault, whether the safety monitor failed to intervene in time, or whether these were unavoidable situations caused by other road users. Tesla wants us to trust its safety record while making it impossible to verify.

The craziest part is that Tesla began offering rides without a safety monitor in Austin in late January 2026, just after it experienced 4 crashes in the first half of the month.

As we reported in our status check on the program yesterday, the service currently has roughly 42 active cars in Austin with below 20% availability and the rides with safety monitor are extremely limited and not running most of the time, but it’s still worrisome that Tesla would even attempt that knowing its crash rate is still higher than human drivers with a safety monitor in the front passenger seat.

The fact that regulators are not getting involved tells you everything you need to know about the state of the US/Texas government right now.

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