Waymo Pauses Self-Driving Services in Five US Cities Due to Software Issue
En resumen
- Waymo has temporarily suspended its self-driving car services in five US cities following a software issue that caused vehicles to enter flooded roads.
- The company is recalling nearly 3,800 robotaxis and working on software safeguards.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Waymo, owned by Google's parent company Alphabet, provides over 500,000 robotaxi trips weekly across multiple US cities. Several incidents with driverless cars have raised safety concerns over the past year, including a large power outage in San Francisco in December 2025 that stopped Waymo taxis.
Waymo has now paused its self-driving car service in five US cities, in response to a software issue which has seen some vehicles enter flooded roads and get stuck.
The US firm recently issued a recall of thousands of robotaxis following an incident on 20 April in San Antonio, Texas when an empty Waymo vehicle entered a flooded road and was swept into a creek.
Following a similar incident in Atlanta, Georgia, a Waymo spokesperson said it had expanded the temporary pause to five cities - four in Texas as well as Atlanta - "out of an abundance of caution".
The company told Reuters it had also suspended services on US freeways as it works to improve its cars' performances in construction zones.
The company, which hopes to operate a robotaxi service in London later this year, told the BBC safety was its "highest priority".
"We continue to closely monitor forecasts, alerts, and live weather conditions, and we will resume serving riders soon," it said.
The software problem, which could allow vehicles "to slow and then drive into standing water on higher speed roadways" was highlighted in a letter posted on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration website earlier this month.
In response, Waymo issued a voluntary recall of nearly 3,800 of its robotaxis that use the company's fifth and sixth-generation automated driving systems, and said it was working on "additional software safeguards".
On Wednesday an unoccupied Waymo robotaxi was reported trapped in flood water on a road in Atlanta.
Meanwhile, the firm has temporarily pulled its service on freeways in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Miami, and said it was evaluating its cars' performance in construction zones.
In a statement given to Reuters, the company said it expected to resume those routes soon.
Waymo is owned by Google's parent company Alphabet, and says it provides more than 500,000 trips per week across multiple US cities including San Francisco, Austin and Miami.
Over the past year, several incidents with driverless cars have raised concerns over their safety.
In December 2025, a large power outage in San Francisco led Waymo taxis to stop working around the city, causing significant disruption.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Waymo will resume services on freeways soon.
Probable · En días
Preguntas abiertas
- When will Waymo resume services on freeways?
- What specific software safeguards are being implemented?
- Will there be further recalls or regulatory actions?
- How will this impact Waymo's planned London service?






