No US robotaxi operator offers fully driverless, fleetwide wheelchair-accessible service. Not one. Tesla now says it wants to change that. At a Washington, DC City Council hearing in July 2026, Tesla senior policy advisor India Herdman told lawmakers the company is developing “a purpose-built, wheelchair-accessible autonomous vehicle” at Gigafactory Texas. The promise lands somewhere between overdue and too good to verify — and for wheelchair users stuck navigating a paratransit system that routinely makes a 15-minute trip a two-hour ordeal, the stakes are anything but abstract.
What Tesla Actually Said – And What It Didn’t
The company confirmed an “active product” but offered zero details on timeline, design, or deployment.
Herdman called it “an active product being built by Tesla in Texas.” That’s the whole menu. No renderings. No specs. No launch window. Tesla didn’t respond to press inquiries, according to Electrek. The company historically takes several years from announcement to production, and there’s no reason to expect a faster runway here.
Here’s what is confirmed:
- The new WAV is a separate vehicle from the two-seat Cybercab, which lacks full wheelchair accommodation.
- Cybercab features wheelchair-height seating, Braille controls, and butterfly doors for easier transfers — but riders must leave their wheelchair to ride.
- Tesla’s Robotaxi app already includes an accessibility tab routing users to third-party wheelchair-accessible providers while its own solution is in development.
- Elon Musk has publicly confirmed WAV ambitions, replying “Absolutely” to an investor post about accessible rides.
- None of Tesla’s current robotaxi pilots in Texas and Florida use wheelchair-accessible vehicles.
“We are in development for a purpose-built, wheelchair-accessible autonomous vehicle.” — India Herdman, Tesla senior policy advisor, DC City Council hearing, July 2026
Nobody Else Has Cracked This Either
Every major robotaxi competitor is also struggling to solve the wheelchair-accessibility problem.
Waymo policy lead Matt Walsh told the same DC councilmembers his company has “not been able to identify a platform that is fully wheelchair-accessible while also meeting the unique specifications to retrofit that vehicle with our technology.” May Mobility offers WAV rides but requires a human operator to deploy ramps. Cruise built a wheelchair-accessible prototype in 2023, then suspended operations following a pedestrian collision that ultimately led GM to pull its funding entirely — a cautionary tale about how quickly AV ambitions can unravel.
The legal pressure keeps building. The DOJ sued Uber in 2025 over disability accommodation failures. ADA rules demand reasonable modifications from transportation providers. Cities drafting robotaxi legislation — DC included — are increasingly tying operating permits to accessibility requirements. For wheelchair users, this isn’t a product feature debate. It’s a question of whether autonomous mobility gets designed around them from the start, or leaves them behind the way every previous wave of ride-hail innovation did.
“We are trying to find that vehicle.” — Matt Walsh, Waymo policy lead, DC City Council hearing, July 2026
The gap between “active product being built” and an actual vehicle carrying actual passengers in their wheelchairs remains enormous. If Tesla closes it, that would genuinely reshape daily autonomy for people who currently schedule their lives around paratransit uncertainty. But a declaration made at a regulatory hearing — with no design, no timeline, and no response to the press — is a promissory note, not a product. “Active” has to mean more than announced.




























