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Unredacted NHTSA Reports Show Tesla Robotaxi Crashes Under Remote Control

The disclosures point to heavier reliance on remote driving than rivals, prompting new safety questions.

Overview

  • NHTSA’s public database now includes narrative details for 17 Tesla robotaxi crashes after the company stopped redacting its submissions.
  • The records describe at least two Austin incidents where a teleoperator took control and drove into a fence and a construction barricade at about 8 to 9 mph with a safety monitor onboard and no passengers.
  • In the July 2025 case the remote driver went up a curb into a metal fence, and the safety monitor reported minor injuries, while the January 2026 case involved contact with a temporary barricade and vehicle scraping.
  • Tesla told lawmakers it allows remote piloting only below 10 mph to move stuck cars, which helps explain why the remote-control crashes were low speed.
  • Other entries note low-speed contacts such as clipped mirrors, a parking-lot chain strike, and contact with a dog, and researchers warn that remote driving can suffer from limited visibility and signal lag.