How Google's Waymo is Scaling Robotaxis in 2026
How Google's Waymo is Scaling Robotaxis in 2026
The Race to Autonomous Driving is Heating UpđĽ A deepdive into Waymo. đşď¸đđŁď¸
June 25, 2026.
Good Morning from typhoon drenched Taichung, Taiwan. I try to give my readers broad exposure to AIâs evolution from multiple angles. Thereâs a surprising number of aspects to this.
AI definitely doesnât move as fast as you think, just take smart cars and autonomous vehicles. Even the best companies doing this in the world are taking decades to scale.
On the topic of Physical AI there are the frontiers and then thereâs the reality. An important part of how we as consumers experience AI in the physical reality is going to be autonomous vehicles (AVs).
Letâs be real, difficult more physical manifestations of AI and emerging tech like AVs, robotics, humanoids, Quantum computers with millions of qubits and even more speculative ideas like datacenters in space are going to be exceedingly difficult to turn into reality. They will on the whole take more time, be slower to arrive and be less capable than you think. Innovation is hard, and God knows weâve been patient. [The idea that AI is moving so fast isnât empirically correct]. Iâd like to see us cover AI with more realism.
Think about how long itâs taken even Waymo to arrive at this point. Waymo was originally founded in January, 2009. On June 11th, 2026 Waymo finally launched a premier subscription tier for $29.99 a month in select cities (called Premier). Itâs starting this year in select cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles and Phoenix. In terms of AV startups, Iâm also really bullish on Wayve, an Nvidia backed UK based startup who are building AV based software and AI models for autonomy.
Whatâs your taxi ride preference? đşď¸
Driver or no-driver, consumer preferences might shift radically in the years ahead. If price wasnât a factor what would you use?
Physical AI is Hard, Autonomy is Tricky
AVs and robotaxis are still years away from scale and while some of us have experienced them, most of us still have not. The build out of physical datacenters and AI Infrastructure at scale is hitting a crazy number of bottlenecks. Manifesting AI in the real world is just incredibly challenging. By the time we arrive in the 2030s however itâs going to be pretty exciting. Autonomous vehicles (AVs) and Robotaxis have to be one of the most fascinating case studies of this. As will another industry Iâm also becoming pretty obsessed with, space-technologies.
Todayâs article is going to be primarily about Waymo. I also want to introduce you to some of the AV and mobility related Newsletters I follow.
Harry Campbell of the Driverless Digest Newsletter shared this image recently:
Besides Waymo, there are many other interesting names. Thereâs the likes of (Amazonâs) Zoox and Mobileye who are also making headway and bigger plans in the Robotaxi direction. Intel majority owned Mobileye is aiming for and initial 100-vehicle fleet into a major U.S. city in 2027 and hoping to scale the fleet to roughly 17,000 vehicles over the next five years.
Google spin-off Waymo is however the outright leader, with a $16 Billion funding round earlier this year and a valuation of over $126 Billion. Alphabetâs stake in Waymo is estimated to be likely well over 70%. So when we say Google is a full-stack AI company - we arenât just talking vertical integration and the application layer but the most tangible things like transportation and TPUs, the nuts and bolts. All of this is compounded by how well Google has raised capital in 2026. Autonomy and AI infrastructure are just two areas where Alphabetâs future is exceedingly bright.
Waymo will be taking on Uber in its own way but have several global rivals such as Baidu Apollo (Apollo Go), Pony.AI, WeRide, Tesla and a host of others. In March, Uber announced a massive partnership to invest up to $1.25 billion through 2031 to deploy up to 50,000 fully autonomous Rivian R2 robotaxis exclusively on the Uber platform. There are so many players and so many partnerships, itâs a bit confusing even for us who watch the space. How will Waymo challenge Uber and how will all of these partnerships pan out in different regions of the world?
Waymoâs track record is also fairly stunning when it comes to the driver and passenger saftey aspect: Even as Waymo has scaled into increasingly complex environments like airports and new cities, the safety benefits kept compounding. Itâs a good sign for the AV industry. While thereâs always the funny or scary story of some headline mishap, for the most part the tech is improving.
Waymo is marketing itself a bit like the Anthropic of the road, and as being 10x safer than an average human driver. It certainly makes you pause and wonder.
In case you are interested in following autonomous vehicle news one of my favorites is Daniel Abreu Marques. I asked him to do a deep dive for us on Waymo, todaysâ piece.
The AV Market Strategist
Deep Dive Pony.ai: Business Model, Unit Economics, Fleet Data, Financials and More
WeRide Hits Madrid, Teslaâs Map Grows but Its Fleet Doesnât, NVIDIA Wants to Be the Robotaxi Standard
Waymoâs Shocking Data Release, Uber Invest $100M in Robotaxi Infrastructure
Mobileye Joins the Robotaxi Race
Waymoâs Master Plan
So what does a Waymo look like from the inside?
Autonomous AV and Neo Mobility Newsletters of Note â
Check out some of the community Newsletters for this topic:
I donât know what the future holds but thereâs probably going to be a Waymo in it.
Letâs get on to our deep dive now by Daniel.
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