Tesla Inc. said its vehicles operating with Autopilot or Full Self-Driving (FSD) Supervised recorded one crash for every 6.69 million miles driven in the second quarter of 2025, according to a safety report published on 23 July. Drivers who did not use the driver-assistance system experienced one crash every 963,000 miles over the same period. The crash rate on Autopilot compares with the most recent U.S. national average of one crash every 702,000 miles, based on 2023 data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Federal Highway Administration. Tesla markets the figures as evidence that its software improves road safety, though the company continues to designate both Autopilot and FSD as systems requiring active driver supervision. Tesla also disclosed that vehicles running FSD Supervised have now logged more than 4.5 billion cumulative miles, up from 2.9 billion at the end of December. The company added about 1.2 billion miles in the June quarter, a 140% increase from a year earlier, underscoring the rapid expansion of real-world data feeding Tesla’s autonomous-driving programs.
TSLA: My read on the all important FSD Miles Driven chart. My take: FSD is taking off. ➡️Miles added in June 2025 quarter: 1.2 billion YoY growth vs June 2024 quarter: +140% ➡️Miles added in March 2025 quarter: 0.60 billion YoY growth vs March 2024 quarter: +200% https://t.co/fAWImWpvQA
$TSLA FSD(Supervised)의 누적 주행 마일은 45억 마일에 도달 https://t.co/HDOBcgOb4s
1 billion miles were traveled with Tesla FSD (Supervised) this quarter. That's insane. $TSLA