Waymo’s skyrocketing ridership in one chart
But it’s Waymo’s rate of growth in ridership and markets that offers a more compelling story.
Over that same two-year timespan, Waymo has expanded within its initial markets of Phoenix, San Francisco, and Los Angeles — and beyond them to Austin, Atlanta, Miami, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando.
Those seven cities in the Sun Belt were all added in just the past year.
The company still uses that “over 3,000” fleet number today.
That growth does come with challenges. Waymo has received more scrutiny in recent months from the public and regulators.
Meanwhile, San Francisco city officials have raised concerns about how the company handles stuck robotaxis, including Waymo’s occasional use of police and firefighters to clear its vehicles.
Waymo’s ridership numbers are still a sliver of Uber’s human-driven ride-hailing business.
5 billion trips in 2025, a figure that includes completed ride-hailing and delivery trips, according to securities filings.
In other words, Waymo is not nipping at Uber’s tires just yet.
Still, with each month, the company’s lead in robotaxi rides grows wider.
There are some Chinese robotaxi companies, including Pony.
ai and WeRide, that charge for robotaxi rides, but none operate in the United States.
They all have some catching up to do
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: