Tesla has made the first ever fully autonomous delivery of a Model Y electric car — the car arrived from the factory to the customer’s home on its own, without passengers or remote control.

According to Elon Musk, the car drove along city roads and highways autonomously, without any form of external control. The event took place a day earlier than the planned delivery date — June 27, 2025, on the eve of Musk’s 54th birthday.
The delivery took place as part of a test launch of a new autonomous service, which initially includes 10–20 Model Y electric cars. Musk claims that all previous trips during the tests were without incident. This achievement coincides with the launch of Tesla’s robo-taxi, which started on June 22, 2025. The company plans to put millions of autonomous cars on the roads, although videos have already appeared where one of the cars is moving in the oncoming lane.
Tesla has been working on full self-driving for decades, gradually moving closer to realizing the dream of fully autonomous vehicles without human intervention. Despite previous delays, the new breakthrough demonstrates the technological maturity of the FSD (Full Self-Driving) platform and its integration into everyday logistics scenarios — such as driverless car delivery.
Although Tesla made a loud statement about the breakthrough, the mass implementation of such delivery is still in question. It remains open whether this will become a permanent service or remain a demonstration move. But one thing is clear — Tesla has officially entered the era of self-delivery.