Catching up with the local competitors.

Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) is now rolling out in Lithuania, which recognized the Dutch RDW certification to become the second European country with FSD.

First came the Netherlands, now it's Lithuania. And more European countries appear to be in the queue for Tesla's driver assistance system.

Lithuania becomes the second European country to approve Tesla's FSD software, with Greece and Belgium next. But EU-wide clearance faces Scandinavian pushback.

Tesla's complete version of full self-driving technology has not yet got official approval in China, sources familiar with the matter told China Daily on Thursday, but they said…

Tesla announced that its Full Self-Driving system, FSD Supervised, has launched across multiple countries and regions worldwide, with China included in

The long-awaited roll-out got regulator approval a week after Tesla CEO Elon Musk visited China as part of the US president’s delegation.

Tesla launches its FSD system in China as "Intelligent Assisted Driving," but local EV makers like XPeng and Momenta claim they've already surpassed it.

After years of delays, Tesla confirmed that its driving assistance system is now available in China. Nobody can find it, though.

Tesla's full self-driving (FSD) capabilities are now available in China after years of delay, the company said in an X post on Thursday.

Tesla has launched its Full Self-Driving system in China under a different name, facing strict regulations and fierce competition from XPeng and Huawei.

Lithuania has become the first EU member state to recognise the type approval for Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) driver assistance system, granted by

Tesla rolls out FSD in China, making it the 10th country to offer the technology following years of uncertainty.

La Lituania è il secondo paese in Europa ad aprire le porte al sistema FSD dopo i Paesi Bassi

Catching up with the local competitors.

The company's FSD (Supervised) system is now available in China, where Tesla has been losing market share to domestic rivals

Tesla launches its Full Self-Driving package in China for around $9,400 on the Model 3, rebranded as Navigation on Autopilot to meet local regulations.

Tesla’s latest FSD country-list update stirred expectations of a China rollout, but regulatory approvals and U.S.-China auto tensions remain major uncertainties

Just two European countries have approved the use of FSD (Supervised) so far. To use it, new buyers will have to pay a monthly fee.

Even in the countries where it hasn't formally launched yet.

Tesla's FSD (Supervised) is now listed for China a week after Musk joined Trump in Beijing. Chinese rivals already offer Level 3 autonomy.