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Waymo Recalls Over 3,800 Self-Driving Taxis for Software Issue
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Engadget6/18/2026Tech2 min read

Waymo Recalls Over 3,800 Self-Driving Taxis for Software Issue

Quick Look

  • Waymo is recalling over 3,800 self-driving taxis due to a software issue that could cause them to enter freeway construction zones at speed.
  • The company has restricted freeway driving while working on a fix and has filed a voluntary software recall with NHTSA.

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Why It Matters

Waymo, an Alphabet-owned company, is recalling over 3,800 self-driving taxis due to a software issue. This is the second recall in just over a month.

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Waymo is recalling over 3,800 of its self-driving taxis due to a software issue that could cause them to enter closed freeway construction zones at speed, according to a National Highway Traffic Safety Admininstration (NHTSA) bulletin seen by Reuters. The company is reportedly working on a fix and has "restricted freeway driving," the NHTSA safety notice states. It's not known if Waymo had an incident that prompted the recall.

"We identified an area of improvement regarding performance around freeway construction zones," Waymo told Engadget in a statement. "We voluntarily restricted freeway operations last month while making improvements, proactively notified state and federal regulators, and decided to file a voluntary software recall with NHTSA." The company has previously noted that such recalls are a notice of intent to fix the related software issue and don't mean that vehicles are taken off the road.

Waymo's Jaguar I-Pace robotaxis were first allowed to hit freeways in Phoenix in 2024, first with employees then paying customers. Prior to that, the cars could only run on highways with a safety driver aboard. The company released a video at the time showing how its vehicle would navigate freeways.

This is the second recall for the Alphabet-owned robotaxi company in a bit more than a month. Back in May, Waymo recalled 3,791 robotaxis after a vehicle drove onto a flood road in San Antonio. Fortunately, no one was injured as the taxi was unoccupied, but the vehicle was swept away by the flood. Prior to that, the fleet was recalled for a particularly dangerous situation when some of its robotaxis were seen failing to stop for school buses that had their stop signs and flashing lights deployed.

Open Questions

  • What is the specific software fix being implemented?
  • Will this impact Waymo's expansion plans?
  • Are there other autonomous vehicle companies facing similar issues?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Engadget.

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