Waymo, the Alphabet subsidiary that develops self-driving automobile tech, has picked up pace. The corporate now operates robotaxis in six cities and has introduced plans to launch in a dozen others this 12 months. It just raised $16 billion in a brand new spherical of funding and says it has served over 20 million rides for the reason that firm launched its service in 2020, 14 million of them in 2025 alone.
However Waymo’s principally clean operations have hit a tough patch in Washington, DC, the place the corporate first started testing in 2024. Regardless of frequent District sightings of the now-familiar white, electrical Jaguars, and regardless of spending tens of hundreds of {dollars} in funds to no less than 4 exterior lobbying corporations final 12 months, in keeping with filings, the corporate’s robotaxis are caught in regulatory limbo. It has no agency debut date within the metropolis, although DC remains to be listed on its web site as launching in 2026. Waymo declined to remark.
The authorized logjam is a extremely seen check for an organization—and business—that’s hoping to increase rapidly throughout the US and, to some extent, the world. (Waymo has stated it’s launching in London this 12 months and in Japan in some unspecified time in the future sooner or later.) For years, autonomous-vehicle corporations have argued, unsuccessfully, that Congress ought to move federal rules governing testing and operations nationwide.
Absent a nationwide regulation, corporations have labored in no less than 22 statehouses to move laws permitting AVs to function on public roads in numerous cities and localities. Now the nationwide debate on driverless tech is once more selecting up steam. This week, the US Senate Commerce Committee held a listening to on the way forward for self-driving tech, the place lawmakers confused the significance of street security and the necessity to develop tech forward of China. A DC service may put the tech entrance in thoughts for a number of the nation’s most influential folks.
However native DC leaders have questions on autonomous autos: how they could operate within the District and whether or not they’ll additional hassle an area economic system already roiled by mass firings throughout the federal authorities.
“Do I imagine autonomous autos are going to be on the roads in DC? I do,” says Councilmember Charles Allen, who chairs the DC Metropolis Council’s Committee on Transportation and Setting. “It’s not an ‘if,’ it’s a ‘when.’”
Allen says he’s nonetheless questioning what dilemma the treatment will resolve within the metropolis, which he says doesn’t have an issue with ride-hail drivers driving dangerously. “I do not suppose cities are defining very nicely, ‘What’s the issue we’re making an attempt to unravel for?’ As a policymaker, what tends to occur in that scenario is, you are simply making an attempt to chase the shiny ball.” Allen says he worries concerning the long-term results of AVs on ride-hail drivers, who’re in a position to choose up shifts when they need.
Granted, Waymo took a danger when it introduced in April 2024 that it will come to DC, as a result of the town didn’t have rules governing, and even permitting, absolutely driverless vehicles to function there. This was a departure for the corporate, which began testing its tech in cities in California, Texas, and Florida that already had some autonomous-vehicle guidelines in place. The Washington, DC, metropolis council handed a regulation permitting AV corporations to check, with a human security driver, within the District in 2020. 4 corporations, together with Waymo and Amazon-owned Zoox, have stated they’re testing there. However the situation hasn’t seen critical legislative motion since.
As a sensible matter, Allen says the town council is ready to move laws as a result of it’s anticipating a now months-delayed report from the District Division of Transportation (DDOT) on the protection of autonomous automobile tech and what guidelines would should be modified within the metropolis to permit deployments to go ahead. The report was due final fall however has been delayed, the company stated, due to funds cuts. Allen says DDOT has now promised it within the spring. DDOT didn’t reply to WIRED’s questions.

