
Waymo is introducing fully autonomous driving in five new cities: Miami, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando. The rollout begins immediately, with fully autonomous operations—meaning no human safety driver aboard—kicking off in Miami right away. The remaining four cities—Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando—will follow in the coming weeks.
While driverless cars will be seen on the roads, the initial phase in all five new cities will focus on employee testing. This rigorous process allows the Waymo Driver AI to learn the unique characteristics and nuances of the local traffic environment, from Florida’s weather patterns to Texas’s complex highway interchanges, without disrupting the public.
- Initial Rollout: Employee-only rides beginning now in Miami, and soon in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando.
- Public Access: Waymo plans to open its ride-hailing service to the general public in these new markets sometime next year (2026).
This approach is part of Waymo’s established “playbook” for bringing autonomous service to a new city, ensuring the consistent, high-quality, and safe experience Waymo riders have come to expect.
This rapid expansion is a testament to the maturation of the Waymo Driver, the company’s autonomous driving technology. Waymo’s AI is now considered generalizable, meaning the core system can adapt more quickly to new urban environments.
In each new city, the Waymo Driver’s performance is compared against a proven baseline. Any local characteristics—like a unique intersection design or specific weather challenge—are used to refine the AI. This data is fed into a flywheel of continuous improvement , which benefits the entire global fleet through regular software updates.





