Uber’s First Autonomous Taxi Market Announced
Uber has selected the San Francisco Bay Area as the launch market for its specially built autonomous taxi, with commercial operations expected to begin in late 2026.
Key Takeaways
- San Francisco Bay Area will be first market for Uber’s autonomous taxis
- Commercial launch planned for late 2026
- 100 test vehicles hitting roads in coming months
- 20,000+ autonomous taxis planned within six years
- Multiple partnerships accelerating deployment
Lucid and Nuro Partnership
The ride-hailing giant announced in July it was developing a robotaxi with electric vehicle maker Lucid and self-driving technology company Nuro Inc. The exclusive Uber vehicle is based on the Lucid Gravity SUV platform.
Lucid recently delivered the first 100 test vehicles to Nuro, which will begin road testing in the coming months. Uber plans to deploy over 20,000 Lucid-based autonomous taxis across multiple locations within six years, all accessible through the standard Uber app.
Expanding Autonomous Partnerships
Uber is accelerating its autonomous vehicle strategy through multiple partnerships. The company revealed on Tuesday it’s developing robotaxis with technology firm Nvidia and automaker Stellantis.
Stellantis expects to begin production of at least 5,000 Nvidia-powered autonomous vehicles for Uber’s U.S. operations starting in 2028.
Last week, Uber launched autonomous taxi services in Saudi Arabia through a partnership with Chinese autonomous technology company WeRide.
Competitive Landscape
While autonomous taxis aren’t new, Uber’s adoption as the world’s largest ride-hailing service marks a significant industry milestone. Uber operates across 15,000 cities in more than 70 countries globally.
Waymo, owned by Google parent Alphabet, has been testing autonomous taxis for years and currently operates in Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Austin. Waymo plans to expand to London next year.
Notably, Uber is already partnering with Waymo on autonomous taxi services in Austin, demonstrating the company’s multi-vendor approach to autonomous technology.




