Uber’s robotaxi partner crashed 16 times in four months. The regulator called it “excessively assertive and insufficiently capable.”

NHTSA Investigates Uber Partner Avride Over Robotaxi Crashes

Background

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has initiated an investigation into Avride, an autonomous vehicle partner of Uber, following a series of crashes involving its robotaxis in Dallas.

The Incidents

Between December 2025 and March 2026, Avride's Hyundai Ioniq 5 robotaxis crashed 16 times, resulting in one minor injury. These incidents included:

  • Changing lanes into the path of other vehicles without slowing or stopping.
  • Failing to react to slow-moving and stationary objects on the road.
  • Hitting objects like dumpsters and a parked pickup truck's open door.

NHTSA's Findings

The NHTSA characterized Avride's self-driving system as "excessively assertive and insufficiently capable". This critique reflects broader industry challenges in deploying autonomous vehicles before they can consistently prevent accidents.

About Avride

Avride, a subsidiary of Nebius (formerly Yandex NV), was launched with significant resources, including 1,300 employees and $2.5 billion in cash. It inherited Yandex's self-driving technology, which had been under development since 2017.

Uber Partnership

Uber formed a partnership with Avride in October 2024, launching a robotaxi service in Dallas on December 3, 2025. The companies planned to scale Avride's fleet to 500 vehicles and invest up to $375 million. Avride also operates sidewalk delivery robots for Uber Eats and Grubhub at various locations.

NHTSA's Investigation Scope

The NHTSA investigation focuses on the "competence" of Avride's self-driving system, covering all crashes related to its performance. The agency noted that some incidents might also constitute traffic safety violations.

Uber's Strategy

Uber's first-quarter 2026 earnings reported a tenfold increase in autonomous trips year over year, reflecting its strategy to integrate multiple partners into its ride-hailing platform rather than developing its own self-driving technology.