About

EU regulators express safety concerns about Tesla's Full Self-Driving system

Published
Score
15

Why it matters

Tesla's "Full Self-Driving (Supervised)" system won Dutch regulatory approval in April 2026, but the technology now faces coordinated skepticism from multiple EU regulators ahead of a critical committee hearing scheduled for May 5. Emails reviewed by Reuters document safety concerns from Swedish, Finnish, and Estonian authorities, including the system's tendency to exceed speed limits, unsafe performance on icy roads, and vulnerabilities that allow drivers to disable cell-phone safety restrictions. An EU committee will use the May 5 hearing to decide whether to grant approval across the bloc.

Tesla's regulatory strategy has drawn scrutiny. Within days of obtaining Dutch approval, a Tesla policy manager began lobbying Swedish, Estonian, and Finnish authorities to recognize the Dutch decision before those countries had conducted independent reviews. CEO Elon Musk also encouraged customers to pressure regulators during Tesla's November 2025 shareholder meeting—a tactic Norwegian regulators flagged as problematic. Tesla has publicly stated it expects EU-wide approval by mid-to-late 2026.

For attorneys advising Tesla or competing manufacturers, the May 5 hearing will signal whether EU regulators will defer to individual member-state approvals or conduct independent safety assessments. The outcome carries significant commercial weight: Tesla has lost European market share over the past two years and views continental approval as essential to recovery. Regulators' independence on this decision will also establish precedent for how future autonomous-driving systems navigate the EU approval process.

mail Subscribe to Law And Technology email updates

Primary sources. No fluff. Straight to your inbox.

Also on LawSnap