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Uber partners with Motional to launch commercial 'robotaxis' in Las Vegas in latest technology push

Uber's tie-up with Motional will allow Las Vegas users on its app to hail a driverless electric vehicle or robotaxi at no extra cost

March 13, 2026
Uber partners with Motional to launch commercial 'robotaxis' in Las Vegas in latest technology push
Uber partners with Motional to launch commercial 'robotaxis' in Las Vegas in latest technology push

In a new technological advancement, Uber and Hyundai Motor-backed autonomous vehicle firm Motional launched a commercial robotaxi service in Las Vegas on Friday, March 13, the latest in a string of similar tie-ups as the ride-hailing platform ‌doubles down on its self-driving taxi strategy.

Uber has already partnered with major players in the space, including Baidu, Amazon's Zoox, Nissan and British startup Wayve, and said it will invest more than $100 million to develop autonomous vehicle charging hubs as the sector races to commercialize driverless mobility at scale.

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Uber's tie-up with Motional will allow Las Vegas users on its app to hail a driverless electric vehicle at no extra cost, the company said.

The service will cover pick-up zones along Las Vegas Boulevard, including Resorts World, Encore at the Wynn, Westgate Resort & Casino, Downtown Las Vegas, and Town Square near the airport.

Users requesting UberX, Uber Electric, Uber Comfort, or Uber Comfort Electric may be matched with a Motional IONIQ 5 robotaxi, ‌with the option to switch to a conventional ride.

Motional's IONIQ 5 is among the first SAE Level 4-capable autonomous vehicles certified under the U.S.'s Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, according to Uber.

The vehicles will initially operate with a human safety operator behind the wheel, with a fully driverless service expected to be launched by late 2026.

Earlier this week, Uber signed a multi-year deal to deploy Amazon's self-driving unit, Zoox's robotaxis, on its platform, with limited services already live in Las Vegas and a pilot rider program underway in San Francisco.

Uber, Wayve and Nissan agreed to collaborate, targeting a pilot robotaxi launch in Tokyo by late 2026, marking Uber's first autonomous vehicle partnership in Japan.

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