The Problem with Tesla FSD
Tesla's Full Self-Driving has been "coming soon" since 2016. Ten years later, it remains a Level 2 driver-assistance system — meaning you must keep your hands on the wheel and eyes on the road at all times. The name is, frankly, misleading.
At $99 per month or $8,000 upfront, FSD is the most expensive driver-assistance package on the market. For that price, you get features that Super Cruise and DRIVE PILOT match or exceed — sometimes with actual legal liability backing them up.
Meanwhile, three alternatives are already delivering what Tesla keeps promising — some fully driverless, one legally certified as Level 3. Here's what smart buyers are actually using.
What to Get Instead
Real autonomous driving. No endless beta. No paying to test someone's software.
Waymo One
$0 hardware cost · ~$2/mileFully driverless Level 4 robotaxis operating in San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles, and Austin. No safety driver. No steering wheel touching. The car does everything — and Waymo carries the liability.
Try Waymo OneGM Super Cruise
Included · 400,000+ miles mappedTrue hands-free highway driving on 400,000+ miles of mapped roads. Driver monitoring via infrared camera. Available on Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC. No subscription gimmicks on most trims.
Explore Super CruiseMercedes DRIVE PILOT
From $2,500 · Level 3 certifiedThe only system legally certified as Level 3 in the US. Under 40 mph on approved highways, the car assumes full liability. You can legally take your eyes off the road. Tesla can't say that.
Learn About DRIVE PILOTMobileye SuperVision
Built into multiple vehiclesIntel's autonomous tech powers Zeekr, Polestar, and others with true hands-free driving on highways and city streets. Camera-first approach like Tesla — but with a decade more validation and actual OEM partnerships.
See Mobileye VehiclesWhen Tesla FSD Actually Makes Sense
Buy Tesla FSD if you're already driving a Tesla and plan to keep it for 5+ years. If Tesla achieves true Level 4 autonomy (still a big "if"), the hardware is already in your car — meaning a software update could unlock capabilities that cost others tens of thousands. The subscription model at $99/month lets you test this bet without a massive upfront commitment.
It also makes sense if you genuinely enjoy being on the cutting edge and don't mind being a beta tester. Some drivers find the constant improvements exciting rather than frustrating. For everyone else — commuters, families, anyone who wants a car that actually drives itself today — the alternatives above deliver more, sooner, with less risk.