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- Robotaxis and autonomous cars once again have a large presence at CES 2026.
- Several companies, including Amazon's Zoox, are providing off-site demos.
- Business Insider is providing an on-the-ground look at the latest in the advanced mobility space.
Business Insider is taking on CES 2026.
I'm on the ground in Las Vegas from Tuesday to Thursday, taking in all there is to know about the latest in the driverless space.
Robotaxis and self-driving cars have already had an outsize presence at the tech conference, especially in the previous hype cycle of the late 2010s and early 2020s.
Things have changed since then. The industry has largely moved on from mere concepts and technology validation to: How are we going to realistically scale autonomy?
It's day one of the conference, and there's already a lot to take in.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the Alpamayo family, which will serve as an autonomous-driving stack for OEMs to deal with those stubborn edge cases — or the "long tail" of self-driving.
Uber and Nuro showed off an early look at the Lucid Gravity SUV that the companies hope public riders will be able to take by late 2026.
I'll be spending less time at keynotes and speaker events and more on real-life demonstrations and meetings with industry leaders and commentators in autonomy
Think of this as my personal notebook, where I jot down everything I've learned and seen at the conference.
Check back in for more updates.
Amazon-backed Zoox is unlike any other robotaxi.
Lloyd Lee/BI
This is the first year Zoox, an Amazon-backed robotaxi company, will be giving live demonstrations of its service during CES.
I got to take a ride in one on Monday night in front of Resorts World. (The company tagline that I saw from an ad at the Harry Reid International Airport was: "Don't just do the Strip. Zoox it.")
My immediate thoughts were that Zoox feels unlike any other robotaxi or pseudo-robotaxi on the market. It felt more like I was on a theme park ride than in an everyday car we're familiar with.
Unlike Waymo's robotaxis, Zoox is not a regular car you could buy that's been retrofitted with sensors. The Zoox car is bi-directional — meaning there's no real front or back of the car — and the inside has no steering wheel, just seats.
The robotaxis were clearly a great tourist attraction from what I saw. My Uber driver wasn't too happy about them.
Uber, Lucid, and Nuro have big plans to scale.
Lloyd Lee/BI
Uber, Lucid, and Nuro had a swanky cocktail hour at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, where they quite literally wined and dined a room full of reporters, analysts, and investors: endless glasses of wine and an open bar, lobster tails, jumbo shrimp, too many appetizers to count, and a giant charcuterie board — the works.
Maybe understandably so? 2026 will be a big year for the three companies.
Uber's plan is to roll out a robotaxi service by late 2026. The first market is San Francisco, where Uber will directly compete with Waymo. These two companies are partners in other markets, like Austin.
"We've been moving very, very quickly," Nuro's co-CEO and cofounder Dave Ferguson said. "We signed this partnership last July. We're already testing the production-intent vehicles on public roads. And very soon, we're going to have tens of thousands of them worldwide."
Here's a 60,000-pound John Deere combine for scale.
Lloyd Lee/BI
A quick image to get a sense of how big CES's mobility division is at West Hall of the convention center: There's a 60,000-pound combine from John Deere that's sitting in the middle of the showroom.
The combine is one of the world's largest on the market, according to Julian Sanchez, an engineer at the machinery company.
Even so, John Deere doesn't even have the largest footprint on the floor. This year, it's Hyundai.
The combine isn't autonomous in the way we think about self-driving cars, Sanchez told me, but it is self-steering.
The world got a reality check on self-driving cars since the last hype cycle.
Lloyd Lee/BI
There's a lot of talk of self-driving cars in the automotive industry, but the scope of what it can realistically achieve has narrowed down in the last decade or so.
Paul Costa, an ex-Apple veteran of 25 years who worked on the company's abandoned self-driving car project, gave me a bit of interesting color from what he saw at CES in 2015 — when the driverless car hype was reaching its peak — and what's different now.
"My sense at the time was that people really wanted to focus on Level 5 autonomy," Costa, who now leads Ford's electrical engineering team, told me. Level 5 is the highest level of autonomous driving set forth by the Society of Automotive Engineers. That means full autonomy in all weather conditions and no geofences. Waymo is currently Level 4.
The tone has been brought down to reality, according to Costa. The focus is on highly advanced driver assistance systems and eyes-off driving or Level 3 systems, he said.
"Now, I feel like here in 2026, L3 is extremely interesting," Costa said. "It's interesting for me to see how the industry — its focus has changed over the years."
The big unknown for robotaxis: How long can they last on the roads?
Lloyd Lee/BI
AV operators, like Waymo, Uber, or Lyft, need to know the lifespans of their vehicles to determine the true cost of staying in business.
Stephen Hayes, VP of Lyft's autonomous vehicle program, told me that the "lifetime mileage" the company can accrue on a robotaxi is still unknown.
"How long will an AV last?" Hayes said. "Today, we're in the early innings, obviously, of the autonomous transition and very few AV players have vehicles on the road that have run hundreds of thousands of miles."
Part of the business proposition for ride-hailing companies like Lyft is reselling its fleet of vehicles, also known as remarketing. Lyft owns a fleet through its subsidiary called Flexdrive. For robotaxis, remarketing remains an "unknown," Hayes said.
"There's no market for it," he said. "There's no secondary market where it's like, 'Hey, I want to go buy a used AV.' Ten years from now, it's going to look completely different, but we don't know in what ways."
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