Tesla’s autonomous taxi project has just cleared a critical bureaucratic hurdle on the road to mass production.
Elon Musk’s ambitious plan to launch a fully autonomous taxi has just overcome a major regulatory obstacle on its path to large-scale production.
On February 18, 2026, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) officially granted Tesla, Inc. special approval to use Ultra-Wideband (UWB) technology to operate street-level wireless charging systems. The decision is crucial for the operation of the Cybercab — a futuristic robotaxi designed without a steering wheel, pedals, or even a traditional charging port.
Previously, Tesla faced a legal barrier because existing FCC rules required devices using such radio chips to be portable, such as smartphones. Installing antennas on fixed outdoor structures was prohibited. For Musk’s autonomous fleet concept, however, that rule posed a major challenge: the ground-based charging pad must be permanently installed in a parking space to effectively “communicate” with the vehicle as it approaches. The commission ultimately accepted the engineers’ arguments, confirming that the system’s short-range signals would not interfere with other networks or astronomical observations.
The Cybercab’s positioning technology is designed to operate with extreme precision. As the vehicle approaches a charging station, it first establishes a low-energy Bluetooth connection. Only after that link is confirmed does a radar module activate, helping the car align perfectly over the induction platform. The entire scanning and alignment process takes less than 150 milliseconds, allowing energy transfer to begin almost instantly — without any human intervention.
Regulatory approval effectively lays the groundwork for a new Tesla ecosystem. The first two-seat Cybercab units have already begun rolling off the production line at Tesla’s Gigafactory in Texas.