These are the states where Tesla is racing to hit Elon Musk’s end-of-year Robotaxi goal

These are the states where Tesla is racing to hit Elon Musk’s end-of-year Robotaxi goal

These are the states where Tesla is racing to hit Elon Musk’s end-of-year Robotaxi goal

  • Tesla is on a hiring spree as it races to roll out robotaxi service across the country.

  • The EV maker is seeking regulatory approval in several states and has listed over 40 job openings.

  • Elon Musk has said Tesla plans to expand robotaxis to eight to 10 metro areas by the end of 2025.

Elon Musk has said the company’s value hinges on cracking autonomous driving at scale. Now, with a year-end deadline to operate Robotaxis in up to 10 cities, the company is hiring across the country to make it happen.

Musk said in October that Tesla plans to operate the program in eight to 10 metropolitan areas by the end of 2025, with a total of more than 1,000 vehicles. So far, it has launched in San Francisco and Austin. During its annual shareholder meeting on November 6, the company said it’s targeting Las Vegas, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, and Miami next.

But job listings paint an even broader picture.

As of early November, Tesla had more than 40 Robotaxi-related postings in cities like Orlando, Tampa, and Las Vegas. The roles, which range from support to management, appear geared toward supporting a driverless fleet by cleaning the vehicles and overseeing logistics.

In Austin, Tesla is hiring for vehicle operators and specialists who can respond to “vehicle incidents in the field.” Tesla already employs three fleet support specialists in the city, according to LinkedIn. In San Francisco, the company continues to hire engineers for its Autopilot team.

The company also employs test drivers — who are responsible for training the autonomous software — in cities across the country, workers told Business Insider.

The company is looking to bring on a Robotaxi insurance claims specialist who will play “a critical role in managing incident reporting and claim processes for Tesla Robotaxi and ride-hailing operations.”

The broad swath of locations — more than a dozen cities across 10 states — shows how intent Tesla and Musk are about scaling the service. Musk said in July that it would expand at “a hyper-exponential rate.”

“I think we will probably have autonomous ride-hailing in probably half the population of the US by the end of the year,” he added.

Musk has repeatedly said Tesla’s valuation is based on its ability to launch true self-driving technology at scale. Still, Tesla has long been seen as lagging behind competitors like Waymo and Zoox. Those companies’ autonomous driving technology has been deployed in half a dozen cities across the country, some operating for several years already.

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