Uber customers in Dallas may get an Avride-branded robotaxi the next time they hail a ride.

A year after announcing their partnership, Uber and Avride have launched a commercial robotaxi service in Dallas. The

service comes with a few caveats, however, including the addition of a human safety operator behind the wheel and a

limited operating area. The companies said fully driverless operations, without a safety operator, will begin in the

future and the service area will expand.

For Uber, the launch closes out a year of rapid dealmaking — and deployments — with a variety of autonomous vehicle

technology companies, including Waymo, China’s WeRide, and San Francisco-based startup Nuro. To date, Uber has locked in

20 partnerships with AV companies across freight, delivery, and robotaxis, some of which are now in commercial

operation. Uber offers autonomous vehicles through its ride-hailing app in Abu Dhabi and Riyadh with WeRide, and in

Atlanta, Austin, and Phoenix with Waymo.

Uber said it plans to have autonomous vehicles on its network in at least 10 cities by the end of 2026. Over the next

two years, the plan is to launch AVs on its app in Arlington, Texas, Dubai, London, Los Angeles, Munich, and the San

Francisco Bay Area.

Many of these partnerships have included an investment by Uber, and Avride, an Austin-based startup that sits under

parent company Nebius Group, is one of those.

In October 2024, the ride-hailing company struck a multi-year deal with Avride to bring its sidewalk delivery robots and

autonomous vehicles to both Uber Eats and Uber. Within months, Avride’s sidewalk robots began delivering food via the

Uber Eats app in Austin, Dallas, and Jersey City.

This fall, Avride secured strategic investments and commercial commitments worth $375 million from Uber and Nebius,

which was previously known as Yandex NV, the Netherlands-based company that sold off its Russian business in 2024.

Uber’s use of Avride sidewalk robots for its food delivery business was notable, but this robotaxi launch has arguably

higher stakes for both companies.

The robotaxi fleet of all-electric Hyundai Ioniq 5 vehicles is equipped with Avride’s self-driving system and will

service a nine-square-mile area of Dallas that includes downtown. Uber said it plans to expand the operating territory

in the coming months.

The fleet, currently limited, will eventually expand to hundreds of Avride robotaxis across Dallas in the next few

years, according to an Uber spokesperson.

The robotaxi service in Dallas will eventually operate similarly to Uber’s partnership with Waymo in Austin and Atlanta.

Avride will initially manage its own fleet, and Uber will take over day-to-day fleet operations, including cleaning,

maintenance, inspections, charging, and depot management. From the start, Uber will provide end-to-end rider support,

while Avride will oversee vehicle testing.

Uber riders who request UberX, Uber Comfort, or Uber Comfort Electric rides may be matched with an Avride robotaxi. The

match is not guaranteed, and riders can increase their chances of getting a robotaxi by changing a setting in the Uber

app. Robotaxi rides will cost the same as those operated by a human driver, according to Uber.

When an Uber user is notified they’ve been matched with an Avride robotaxi, they can choose to accept or switch to a

human-driven ride. Once the robotaxi arrives, riders can use the Uber app to unlock the vehicle, open the trunk, and

start the trip.