Waymo is set to significantly expand its robotaxi operations, adding four new cities across Texas and Florida to its growing network.
This strategic move will see the autonomous vehicle fleet deployed in Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio, Texas, as well as Orlando, Florida, bringing Waymo’s total reach to ten major U.S. metropolitan markets.
The expansion, announced on Tuesday, further cements Waymo’s leading position in the autonomous driving sector. Rivals such as Tesla and the Amazon-owned Zoox are currently still in the testing phase, operating their vehicles in only a handful of U.S. cities. In contrast, Waymo’s robotaxis have already completed more than 400,000 weekly trips across its six metropolitan areas, including Phoenix, the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta, and Austin, Texas.
Customers can typically hail a Waymo ride through its dedicated app in most locations. However, in Atlanta and Austin, the robotaxis are exclusively available for booking via Uber’s ride-hailing service.

The expansion into four more markets marks a significant step toward Waymo’s goal to surpass 1 million weekly paid trips by the end of 2026. Without identifying where its robotaxis will be available next, Waymo is targeting a list of eight other cities that include Las Vegas, Washington, Detroit and Boston while signaling its first overseas availability is likely to be London.
To help pay for more robotaxis, Waymo recently raised $16 billion as part of the financial infusion that puts the value of the company at $126 billion. The valuation fueled speculation that Waymo may eventually be spun off from its corporate parent Alphabet, where it began as a secret project within Google in 2009.
Although Waymo is opening up in four more cities, its robotaxis initially will only be made available to a limited number of people with its ride-hailing app in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Orlando before the service will be available to all comers in those markets.



