Last month, Tesla released data on its full-self-driving (FSD) supervised software for the first time, revealing that the company had over 1 million FSD users around the world.
Now, the company has revealed that collectively, the cars have driven over 13 billion kilometres or over 8.2 billion miles using FSD supervised software.
In a post on X, the company said: āTesla owners have now driven >8 billion miles on FSD Supervisedā.
Tesla owners have now driven >8 billion miles on FSD Supervisedhttps://t.co/0d66ihRQTa pic.twitter.com/TXz9DqOQ8q
— Tesla (@Tesla) February 18, 2026
This is quite an achievement and comes just over two months after the brand shared data around its FSD Supervised usage, hitting over 10 billion kilometres in December 2025.
A live tracker of the FSD supervised distance travelled at the time of writing showed almost 8.3 billion miles, of which over 3 billion miles or almost 5 billion kilometres, were driven on city streets.
Most of the kilometres travelled on FSD-supervised vehicles have been in North America, but as of 2025, the software has been released in multiple countries, including Australia and New Zealand.
On 18 September 2025, Tesla launched the FSD supervised software to all eligible cars in, making these markets the first right-hand-drive markets in the world.
At that time, this software was available on all new vehicles as an option with the current pricing of $10,100, as well as a monthly subscription that was launched later in the year, which now starts at $149 per month.
This subscription offering has helped bring thousands of current owners to try FSD Supervised for the first time, but itās worth noting that the software isnāt currently available to older, Hardware 3-equipped cars, but may be available in the future.

Soon after launching locally, Tesla shared usage statistics that revealed that within a fortnight of that launch, before the subscription offering was even available, owners across Australia and New Zealand had already driven more than 1 million kilometres.
Itās worth noting that as of last week, Tesla announced that the company plans to only offer FSD supervised via a subscription as of the 1st of April 2026.
This means that the $10,100 outright purchase of the option will no longer be available to new customers after that.
Also, this week, Tesla announced that it had produced its first official steering and pedaless two-seater Robotaxi, the Cybercab, at its factory in Texas, marking a huge step for autonomy.
All these developments make it quite clear the direction the brand is heading in, going all-in on autonomy in a race that could change the global transportation system forever.




