In a decisive move that signals the end of its “asset-light” era, Uber announced on April 15, 2026, a massive $10 billion commitment to its autonomous vehicle (AV) and robotaxi strategy.
The investment marks a fundamental shift for the ride-hailing giant, moving from a platform that connects human drivers with riders to one that will own and operate a multi-billion dollar fleet of self-driving machines.
1. The $10 Billion Breakdown
According to reports from the Financial Times and official company updates, the capital is split into two strategic pillars:
- $7.5 Billion for Fleet Acquisition: Uber plans to purchase at least 35,000 autonomous vehicles over the next few years. This includes an expanded deal to buy 15,000 additional EVs from Lucid (bringing their total commitment to 35,000) and a major contract for 50,000 robotaxis from Rivian by 2030.
- $2.5 Billion in Equity Investments: Uber is taking strategic stakes in the companies building the “brains” and the “bodies” of the autonomous future. This includes increased investments in Lucid, Wayve (UK-based AI firm), and Rivian.
2. Launch Roadmap: 28 Cities by 2028
CEO Dara Khosrowshahi outlined an aggressive geographic expansion intended to counter the growth of Googleโs Waymo and Amazonโs Zoox.
| Milestone | Target Date | Status / Plan |
| 15 Active Cities | End of 2026 | Deployment of partner AVs (Waymo/Motional) and initial Uber-owned fleets. |
| 28 Active Cities | By 2028 | Full-scale commercial robotaxi services in 28 global metropolitan hubs. |
| Global Dominance | By 2029 | Goal to carry the “largest share of AV trips globally.” |
3. Key Partnerships & Projects
Uber is no longer trying to build the entire self-driving stack alone (having sold its ATG unit years ago). Instead, it is acting as the orchestrator:
- Lucid “Lunar” Concept: Uber and Lucid have unveiled a purpose-built, two-seat robotaxi concept designed specifically for the Uber network.
- Volkswagen/MOIA: In Los Angeles, Uber will collaborate with VWโs MOIA unit to launch driverless vans later this year.
- Nuro Collaboration: Uber continues to deepen its tie-up with Nuro for autonomous local goods delivery.
4. Market and Economic Impact
The announcement caused Uber shares to surge 6.8% on April 15, as investors weighed the potential for massive long-term margin expansion.
- Rewriting the Economics: As one industry expert noted, the “asset-light model was genius for its era, but autonomy rewrites the economics.” By owning the fleet, Uber can eliminate the cost of driver incentivesโits single largest expense.
- Operational Risk: Analysts at Simply Wall St warned that a $10B+ commitment raises execution risk, particularly regarding regulatory approvals in complex urban environments like London and New York.
Conclusion: The “Agentic” Shift
Uberโs $10 billion bet is more than a hardware purchase; it is a move to gain structural control over the next decade of mobility. By locking in supply from partners like Rivian and Lucid, Uber is ensuring it won’t be sidelined if automakers decide to launch their own competing ride-hailing networks.


