Waymo and Uber end robotaxi pilot in Phoenix
CNBC Top News ·

A Waymo vehicle exits a charging lot on Jan. 15, 2026 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty Images Waymo automated vehicle rides are no longer available via the Uber app in Phoenix, Arizona, the …
A Waymo vehicle exits a charging lot on Jan. 15, 2026 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty Images Waymo automated vehicle rides are no longer available via the Uber app in Phoenix, Arizona, the companies confirmed on Monday. "Phoenix was our first pilot market with Waymo and was an intentionally limited deployment, reaching just over a dozen vehicles dedicated to the program," Uber said in a statement. "We learned a lot from that collaboration, which helped us to quickly scale Austin and Atlanta, where hundreds of Waymo AVs are available exclusively on Uber and our coverage area continues to expand." The end of the robotaxi pilot program raises questions about Uber's dominance in a future of self-driving services. Uber execs have pitched the company as the crucial platform that robotaxi players will need to rely on to tap demand. The ride-hailing giant has inked partnerships with every major autonomous vehicle developer, with the exception of Tesla . Tesla's fledgling robotaxi service is operating with a very limited fleet of just 69 registered, automated vehicles in Texas today. Waymo said in a statement that the Uber initiative "was a productive pilot that paved the way for future expansions and partnerships across the globe." The autonomous vehicles that the Google sister company deployed for the Phoenix Uber pilot will remain in use there, and will make autonomous deliveries via DoorDash , which competes with Uber Eats. …
Original source: CNBC Top News
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Texas · Waymo · Google · Austin · Atlanta · Arizona · DoorDash · Nashville · Uber Eats