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Waymo LLC, formerly known as the Google Self-Driving Car Project, is an American autonomous driving technology company headquartered in Mountain View, California. It is a subsidiary of 's parent company (Alphabet Inc).

The company traces its origins to the Stanford Racing Team, which competed in the 2005 and 2007 Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Grand Challenges. Google's development of self-driving technology began in January 2009, led by , the former director of the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (SAIL), and Anthony Levandowski, founder of 510 Systems and Anthony's Robots. After almost two years of road testing, the project was revealed in October 2010.

In fall 2015, Google provided "the world's first fully driverless ride on public roads". In December 2016, the project was renamed Waymo and spun out of Google as part of Alphabet. In October 2020, Waymo became the first company to offer service to the public without safety drivers in the vehicle. Waymo, as of 2025, operates commercial robotaxi services in Phoenix (Arizona), , (California), (California), , , and Austin, Texas with new services planned in New York, Washington, D.C. and , . City mapping in preparation for new services, as of May 2025, is taking place in various cites in the United States including, , , , , and , with pre-mapping preliminary work now in progress in Orlando, and . , it offers over 250,000 paid rides per week, totalling over 1 million miles monthly.

Waymo is run by co-CEOs and . The company raised US$5.5 billion in multiple outside funding rounds by 2022 and raised $5.6 billion funding in 2024. Waymo has or had partnerships with multiple vehicle manufacturers, including , Mercedes-Benz Group AG, Daimler Trucks partners with Waymo to build self-driving semi trucks, TechCrunch, October 27, 2020 Jaguar Land Rover, and .


History

Ground work
Google's development of self-driving technology began on January 17, 2009, at lab, run by co-founder . The project was launched at Google by Sebastian Thrun, the former director of the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (SAIL) and Anthony Levandowski, founder of 510 Systems and Anthony's Robots.

The initial software code and artificial intelligence (AI) design of the effort started before the team worked at Google, when Thrun and 15 engineers, including , Mike Montemerlo, Hendrik Dahlkamp, Sven Strohband, and , built Stanley and Junior, Stanford's entries in the 2005 and 2007 DARPA Challenges. Later, aspects of this technology were used in a digital mapping project for SAIL called VueTool. In 2007, Google the entire VueTool team to help advance Google's Street View technology.

As part of Street View development, 100 were outfitted with digital mapping hardware developed by 510 Systems.

In 2008, the Street View team launched project Ground Truth, to create accurate road maps by extracting data from satellites and street views.


Pribot
In February 2008, a Discovery Channel producer for the documentary series Prototype This! phoned Levandowski. The producer requested to borrow Levandowski's Ghost Rider, the autonomous two-wheeled motorcycle Levandowski's Berkeley team had built for the 2004 DARPA Grand Challenge that Levandowski had later donated to the Smithsonian. Since the motorcycle was not available, Levandowski offered to retrofit a Toyota Prius as a self-driving car for the show.

As a Google employee, Levandowski asked and Thrun whether Google was interested in participating in the show. Both declined, citing liability issues. However, they authorized Levandowski to move forward with the project, as long as it was not associated with Google. Within weeks Levandowski founded Anthony's Robots to do so. He retrofitted the car with light detection and ranging technology (lidar), sensors, and cameras. The Stanford team (Stanley (vehicle)) provided its code base to the project. The ensuing episode depicting Pribot delivering pizza across the San Francisco Bay Bridge under police escort aired in December 2008.

The project success led Google to Google's self-driving car program in January 2009. In 2011, Google acquired 510 Systems (co-founded by Levandowski, Pierre-Yves Droz and Andrew Schultz), and Anthony's Robots for an estimated US$20 million. Levandowski's vehicle and hardware, and Stanford's AI technology and software, became the nucleus of the project.


Project Chauffeur
After almost two years of road testing with seven vehicles, the New York Times revealed the existence of Google's project on October 9, 2010. Google announced its initiative later the same day.

Starting in 2010, lawmakers in various states expressed concerns over how to regulate autonomous vehicles. A related law went into effect on March 1, 2012. Google had been lobbying for such laws. A modified Prius was licensed by the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) in May 2012. The car was "driven" by with Levandowski in the passenger seat. This was the first US license for a self-driven car.

In January 2014 Google was granted a patent for a transportation service funded by advertising that included autonomous vehicles as a transport method. In late May, Google revealed an autonomous , which had no steering wheel, gas pedal, or brake pedal. In December, Google unveiled a Firefly prototype that was planned to be tested on San Francisco Bay Area roads beginning in early 2015. 2015, Levandowski left the project. In August 2015, Google hired former Hyundai Motor executive, , as CEO. In fall 2015, Google provided "the world's first fully driverless ride on public roads" in Austin, Texas to Steve Mahan, former CEO of the Santa Clara Valley Blind Center, who was a friend of principal engineer Nathaniel Fairfield. It was the first entirely autonomous trip on a public road. It was not accompanied by a test driver or police escort. The car had no steering wheel or floor pedals. By the end of 2015, Project Chauffeur had covered more than a million miles.

Google spent $1.1 billion on the project between 2009 and 2015. For comparison, the acquisition of Cruise Automation by in March 2016 was for $500 million, and Uber's acquisition of Otto in August 2016 was for $680 million.


Waymo
In May 2016, Google and Stellantis announced an order of 100 Chrysler Pacifica minivans to test the self-driving technology. In December 2016, the project changed its name to Waymo and spun out of Google as part of Alphabet. The name was derived from "a new way forward in mobility". In May 2016, the company opened a technology center in Novi, Michigan.

In 2017, Waymo sued for allegedly stealing trade secrets. Waymo began testing minivans without a safety driver on public roads in Chandler, Arizona, in October 2017. In 2017, Waymo unveiled new sensors and chips that are less expensive to manufacture, cameras that improve visibility, and wipers to clear the system. At the beginning of the self-driving car program, they used a $75,000 lidar system from . In 2017, the cost decreased approximately 90 percent, as Waymo converted to in-house built lidar. Waymo has applied its technology to various cars including the Prius, , Chrysler Pacifica, and Lexus RX450h. Waymo partners with Lyft on pilot projects and product development. Waymo ordered an additional 500 Pacifica hybrids in 2017.

In March 2018, Jaguar Land Rover announced that Waymo had ordered up to 20,000 of its electric SUVs at an estimated cost of more than $1 billion. In late May 2018, Alphabet announced plans to add up to 62,000 Pacifica Hybrid minivans to the fleet. Also in May 2018, Waymo established Huimo Business Consulting subsidiary in Shanghai.

In April 2019, Waymo announced plans for vehicle assembly in Detroit at the former American Axle & Manufacturing plant, bringing between 100 and 400 jobs to the area. Waymo used vehicle assembler to turn electric SUVs and Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivans into Waymo Level 4 autonomous vehicles. Waymo subsequently reverted to retrofitting existing models rather than a custom design.

In March 2020, Waymo Via was launched after the company's announcement that it had raised $2.25 billion from investors. In May 2020, Waymo raised an additional $750 million. In July 2020, the company announced an exclusive partnership with auto manufacturer to integrate Waymo technology.

In April 2021, Krafcik was replaced by two co-CEOs: Waymo's COO Tekedra Mawakana and CTO Dmitri Dolgov. Waymo raised $2.5 billion in another funding round in June 2021, with total funding of $5.5 billion. Waymo launched a consumer testing program in San Francisco in August 2021.

In May 2022, Waymo started a pilot program seeking riders in downtown Phoenix, Arizona. In May 2022, Waymo announced that it would expand the program to more areas of Phoenix. In 2023, coverage of the Waymo One area was increased by , expanding to include downtown Mesa, uptown Phoenix, and South Mountain Village.

In June 2022, Waymo announced a partnership with Uber, under which Waymo will integrate its autonomous technology into Uber's freight truck service. Plans to expand the program to Los Angeles were announced in late 2022. On December 13, 2022, Waymo applied for the final permit necessary to operate fully autonomous taxis, without a backup driver present, within the state of California.

In January 2023, The Information reported that Waymo staff were among those affected by Google's layoffs of around 12,000 workers. reported that Waymo was set to kill its trucking program.

In July 2024, Waymo began testing its sixth-generation robotaxis which are based on electric vehicles by Chinese automobile company , developed in a partnership first announced in 2021. They were anticipated to reduce costs, at a time when Waymo was operating at a loss.

In October 2024, Waymo closed a $5.6 billion funding round led by Alphabet, aimed at expanding its robotaxi services, bringing its total capital to over $11 billion. Around that time, the New York Times described Waymo as being "far ahead of the competition", in particular after Cruise had to suspend its operations after an accident in 2023.


Services
In 2017, Waymo highlighted four specific business uses for its autonomous tech: robotaxis, trucking and logistics, urban public transportation, and passenger cars.


Robotaxis
+Service areas in the United States
Full commercial service with "Dozens"
Full commercial service with 100
Los Angeles, CaliforniaFull commercial service 400+
Miami, FloridaAnnounced
Phoenix, ArizonaFull commercial service 200+
San Francisco, CaliforniaFull commercial service 600+
Washington, D.C.Announced

Waymo has also announced planned service in .

In May 2025, Waymo received regulatory approval to expand its commercial robotaxi service into more areas of Silicon Valley, following a green light from the California Public Utilities Commission. The company has longer-term ambitions to provide service to San Francisco International Airport (SFO).


Trucking and delivery
Waymo Via launched in 2020 to work with OEMs to get its technology into vehicles. The company is testing Class 8 tractor-trailers in Atlanta, and southwest shipping routes across Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. The company operates a trucking hub in , Texas. It is partnering with Daimler to integrate autonomous technology into a fleet of Freightliner Cascadia trucks.

Waymo operates 48 Class 8 autonomous trucks with safety drivers. In 2023 Waymo issued a joint application along with Aurora Innovation to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration for a five-year exemption from rules that require drivers to place reflective triangles or a flare around a stopped tractor-trailer truck, to avoid needing human drivers, in favor of warning beacons mounted on the truck cab.

Waymo tested its technology in commercial delivery vehicles with United Parcel Service. In July 2020 Waymo and expanded their partnership, including the development of delivery vehicles.


Technology
Google has invested heavily in matrix multiplication and hardware such as the Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) to augment 's graphics processing units (GPUs) and central processing units (CPUs). Much of this is kept as trade secrets, but transformer technology is likely involved.

Waymo manufactures a suite of self-driving hardware developed in-house. This includes sensors and hardware-enhanced vision system, , and . Sensors give 360-degree views while lidar detects objects up to away. Short-range lidar images objects near the vehicle, while radar is used to see around other vehicles and track objects in motion.

Riders push a button to "start ride,” and have optional "help", "lock", and “pull over" buttons, if needed. The ride usually completes without pressing any button after starting the ride. The car’s steering wheel turns as the car makes turns, and a passenger may sit in the right-front passenger seat, if desired. Passengers see on a screen some of what the car’s sensors see, including pedestrians.

Waymo's architecture VectorNet predicts vehicle trajectories in complex traffic scenarios. It uses a graph neural network to model the interactions between vehicles and has demonstrated state-of-the-art performance on several benchmark datasets for trajectory prediction.

Waymo Carcraft is a virtual world in which Waymo simulates driving conditions. The simulator was named after the video game World of Warcraft. With Carcraft, 25,000 virtual self-driving cars navigate through models of Austin, Texas; Mountain View, California; Phoenix, Arizona, and other cities.

As of 2024, Waymo's fifth-generation robotaxis were based on customized electric vehicles that according to Dolgov adds up to $100,000 to vehicle costs. Other costs include technicians that monitor rides, service personnel, and real estate for storing and charging the vehicles.


Road testing

Chronology
In 2009, Google began testing its self-driving cars in the San Francisco Bay Area.

By December 2013, Nevada, Florida, California, and Michigan had passed laws permitting .Muller, Joann. "With Driverless Cars, Once Again It Is California Leading The Way", Forbes, September 26, 2012 A law proposed in Texas allowed testing. "Legislative Session: 83(R) Bill: HB 2932", Texas Legislature Online, May 30, 2013Whittington, Mark. "Law Proposed in Texas to Require Licensed Driver in Self-Driving Vehicles", Yahoo! News, Fri, March 8, 2013

In June 2015, Waymo announced that their vehicles had driven over and that in the process they had encountered 200,000 stop signs, 600,000 traffic lights, and 180 million other vehicles. Prototype vehicles were driving in Mountain View.Murphy, Mike. "Google's self-driving cars are now on the streets of California", Quartz, June 25, 2015 Speeds were limited to and had safety drivers aboard. Google took its first driverless ride on public roads in October 2015, when Mahan took a 10-minute ride around Austin in a Google "pod car" with no steering wheel or pedals. Google expanded its road-testing to Texas, where regulations did not prohibit cars without pedals or a steering wheel.

In 2016, road testing expanded to Phoenix and Kirkland, Washington, which has a wet climate. , Google had test driven its fleet of vehicles in autonomous mode a total of . In August 2016 alone, their cars traveled a "total of 170,000 miles; of those, 126,000 miles were autonomous (i.e., the car was fully in control)".

In 2017, Waymo reported a total of 636,868 miles covered by the fleet in autonomous mode, and the associated 124 disengagements, for the period from December 1, 2015, through November 30, 2016. In November Waymo altered its Arizona testing by removing safety drivers. The cars were geofenced within a region surrounding Chandler, Arizona.

In 2017, Waymo began testing its level 4 cars in Arizona to take advantage of good weather, simple roads, and permissive laws with minimal disclosure requirements.

In 2017, Waymo began testing in . Also, in 2017, Waymo unveiled its Castle test facility in Central Valley, California. Castle, a former airbase, has served as the project's training course since 2012.

In March 2018, Waymo announced its plans for experiments with the company's self-driving trucks delivering freight to Google data centers in , Georgia. In October 2018, the California Department of Motor Vehicles issued a permit for Waymo to operate cars without safety drivers. Waymo was the first company to receive a permit for day and night testing on public roads and highways. Waymo announced that its service would include Mountain View, Sunnyvale, Los Altos, and Palo Alto. In July 2019, Waymo received permission to transport passengers.

In December 2018, Waymo launched Waymo One, transporting passengers. The service used safety drivers to monitor some rides, with others provided in select areas without them. In November 2019, Waymo One became the first autonomous service worldwide to operate without safety drivers.

By January 2020, Waymo had completed of driving on public roads.

In August 2021, a commercial Waymo One test service started in San Francisco, beginning with a "trusted tester" rollout.

In March 2022, Waymo began offering rides for Waymo staff in San Francisco without a driver.

, Waymo was offering 100,000 paid rides per week across its Phoenix, San Francisco, and Los Angeles markets.

In December 2024, Waymo announced its first international expansion with testing in Tokyo, Japan in the neighborhoods of Shinjuku, Shibuya, Minato, Chiyoda, Chūō, Shinagawa, and Kōtō in partnership with and Japan's GO taxi app.

As of March 2025, Waymo was offering 200,000 paid rides per week in its existing markets, including Phoenix, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

In March 2025, Waymo expanded its commercial robotaxi services to and Austin, Texas. The Silicon Valley rollout included Mountain View, Palo Alto, Los Altos, and parts of Sunnyvale, marking the company’s first official service in the region. Meanwhile, in Austin, Waymo partnered with , allowing riders to hail its self-driving vehicles through the Uber app. The expansion is part of Waymo’s broader growth strategy, as the company continues scaling its autonomous ride-hailing operations. On March 25, Waymo announced it will launch a commercial robotaxi service in Washington D.C. in 2026, pending regulatory approval.

As of April 2025, Waymo’s robotaxi program was operating in ’s Downtown, , Edgewater, , Midtown and Design District. Additionally, preparatory testing was taking place in .. In , Waymo is launching its preparatory testing in Minato, , , Chiyoda, Chūō, and Kōtō. And in , Waymo has announced its intent to launch robotaxi services during summer 2025.


Safety
Waymo regularly publishes safety reports. Waymo is required by the California DMV to report the number of incidents where the safety driver took control for safety reasons. Some incidents were not reported when simulations indicated that the car would have stopped safely on its own. In 2023, Waymo claimed only 3 crashes with injuries over 7.1 million miles driven, nearly twice as safe as a human driver. A 2025 peer-reviewed study by Waymo researchers found that collisions with bicycles and motorcycles were 82% less frequent for Waymo cars than for human drivers, and that collisions with pedestrians were 92% less frequent.

By July 2015, Google's 23 self-driving cars had been involved in 14 minor collisions on public roads. Google maintained that, in all but one case, the vehicle was not at fault because the cars were either driven manually or the driver of another vehicle was at fault.

By July 2021, the NHTSA had found 150 crashes by Waymo. Under NHTSA rules, crashes were reported if the system was in use in the prior 30 seconds, though most crashes did not have injuries.

A Waymo robotaxi killed a dog in San Francisco while in "autonomous mode" in May 2023.

In February 2024, a driverless Waymo robotaxi struck a cyclist in San Francisco. Later that same month, Waymo issued recalls for 444 of its vehicles after two hit the same truck being towed on a highway.

By the end of 2024, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) had received 835 reports documenting 696 incidents involving Waymo vehicles.

Waymo recalled 1,212 vehicles running on its fifth-generation automated driving software in May 2025, due to a software glitch causing some cars to collide with roadway barriers.


Limitations
Waymo operates in some of its testing markets, such as Chandler, Arizona, at L4 autonomy with no one sitting behind the steering wheel, sharing roadways with other drivers and pedestrians. Waymo's earlier testing focused on areas without harsh weather, extreme density, or complicated road systems, but it has moved on to test under new conditions. As a result, beginning in 2017, Waymo began testing in areas with harsher conditions, such as its winter testing in Michigan.

In 2014, a critic wrote in the MIT Technology Review that unmapped stoplights would cause problems with Waymo's technology and the self-driving technology could not detect potholes. Additionally, the lidar technology cannot spot some potholes or discern when a person, such as a police officer, signals the car to stop, the critic wrote. Waymo has worked to improve how its technology responds in construction zones.

California regulators do not require Waymo to disclose every incident involving erratic behavior in its fleet. In the first five months of 2023, San Francisco officials said they had logged more than 240 incidents in which a Cruise or Waymo vehicle might have created a safety hazard.

In 2021, it was noted that Waymo cars kept routing through the Richmond District of San Francisco, with up to 50 cars each day driving to a dead end street before turning around. In 2023, ABC7 News Bay Area posted a video of a journalist taking a ride in a Waymo vehicle, which stopped at a green light and dropped the journalist at the wrong stop twice, despite support intervention.


Backlash
In 2023, the San Francisco group Safe Street Rebel used a practice called "coning" to trap Waymo and Cruise cars with traffic cones as a form of protest after claiming that the cars had been involved in hundreds of incidents. During the 2024 Lunar New Year in San Francisco Chinatown, a mob of vandals attacked, graffitied, and set fire to a Waymo car. No one was injured. In 2024, passengers during a Waymo ride described an attack by an onlooker who attempted to cover the car's sensors.

In 2024, the city attorney of San Francisco attempted to sue to prevent expansion of driverless vehicles including Waymo into San Francisco. San Mateo County government soon after also sent a letter to regulators opposing expansion to its county.

In May 2024, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) launched an investigation into potential flaws in Waymo vehicles, focusing on 31 incidents that included Waymo vehicles ramming into a closing gate, driving on the wrong side of the road, and at least 17 crashes or fires.

In August of 2024, residents of San Francisco's district began to complain about noise pollution from Waymo vehicles honking at each other in a local parking lot. Residents reported that the car horns could be heard daily, with varying levels of activity, usually peaking at around 4 AM and during evening rush hour. The honking appears to have been triggered by the self-driving cars backing in and out of the lot. The story caught attention after a resident began live streaming the cars with lofi hip hop music. Since then, Waymo Director of Product & Ops, Vishay Nihalani has appeared on the live stream to apologize and offer an explanation. Nihalani has assured locals that the honking will be fixed as further software updates are implemented.


Legal matters

Waymo LLC v. Uber Technologies, Inc. et al.
In February 2017, Waymo sued Uber and its subsidiary self-driving trucking company, Otto, alleging theft and patent infringement. The company claimed that three ex-Google employees, including Anthony Levandowski, had stolen trade secrets, including thousands of files, from Google before joining Uber. The alleged infringement was related to Waymo's proprietary lidar technology, Google accused Uber of colluding with Levandowski. Levandowski allegedly downloaded 9 gigabytes of data that included over a hundred trade secrets; eight of which were at stake during the trial.

An ensuing settlement gave Waymo 0.34% of Uber stock, the equivalent of $245 million. Uber agreed not to infringe Waymo's intellectual property. Part of the agreement included a guarantee that "Waymo confidential information is not being incorporated in Uber Advanced Technologies Group hardware and software." In statements released after the settlement, Uber maintained that it received no trade secrets. In May, according to an Uber spokesman, Uber had fired Levandowski, which resulted in the loss of roughly $250 million of his equity in Uber, which almost exactly equaled the settlement. Uber announced that it was halting production of self-driving trucks through Otto in July 2018, and the subsidiary company was shuttered.


California disclosure dispute
In January 2022, Waymo sued the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) to prevent data on driverless crashes from being released to the public. Waymo maintained that such information constituted a . According to The Los Angeles Times, the "topics Waymo wants to keep hidden include how it plans to handle driverless car emergencies, what it would do if a robot taxi started driving itself where it wasn't supposed to go, and what constraints there are on the car's ability to traverse San Francisco's tunnels, tight curves and steep hills."

In February 2022, Waymo was successful in preventing the release of robotaxi safety records. A Waymo spokesperson affirmed that the company would be transparent about its safety record.


See also
  • History of self-driving cars


Further reading

External links

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