Volkswagen is rolling out self-driving ID.Buzz electric minivans as robotaxis in Hamburg and plans a U.S. launch with Uber in Los Angeles by 2026. The ID.Buzz AV utilizes a comprehensive sensor suite comprising 13 cameras and nine lidars to navigate complex city streets. Human safety drivers will remain in place during testing, but fully driverless operations are expected to begin in Los Angeles in late 2026 and in Europe by 2027. This effort marks VW’s bid to compete with established services from Waymo and Tesla amid growing regulatory support in Europe and the U.S.
Here’s why it matters:
Automated ride-hailing represents a potential new channel for volume sales of electric vehicles. As robotaxi fleets expand, dealerships may see increased orders for fleet and business-to-business (B2B) sales, rather than traditional retail channels. Early partnerships, such as Volkswagen’s with Uber and Moia, signal demand for turnkey vehicle plus service packages, which dealers may need to support. Dealers should track sensor costs, production scale-up, and evolving regulations since these factors will influence pricing, availability, and service requirements for fleet customers.
Key takeaways:
- Hamburg pilot deploys 30 ID.Buzz AVs
Moia operates roughly 30 self-driving VW ID.Buzz minivans, each equipped with 13 cameras and nine lidars, on public streets, bookable only by staff during testing. - U.S. rollout with Uber begins 2026
An agreement with Uber will place thousands of ID.Buzz AV robotaxis on Los Angeles roads in late 2026, transitioning to fully driverless service after safety driver removal. - Europe follows in 2027
Due to more complex regulations and road conditions, fully driverless operations in European cities are expected to begin around 2027, following the U.S. debut. - High volume sourcing cuts costs
VW leverages scale across its brands, Porsche, Audi, and VW, to lower sensor and software costs and puts ID.Buzz AV into regular production to further reduce per-unit expenses. - Regulatory momentum builds globally
The EU’s new action plan creates test zones and regulatory sandboxes, while the U.S. government moves to ease barriers. London-based Wayve and Uber also plan a 2026 pilot, underscoring the growing activity of robotaxis in major markets.