
Uber said on Wednesday that it was working with yet another AV company—this time Zoox. Starting in Las Vegas this summer, residents will be able to start summoning Zoox’s toaster-shaped robotaxi—the only self-driving passenger taxi on the streets without a steering wheel or pedals—from the Uber app. The companies said the service is expected to expand to Los Angeles, too, by the middle of 2027.
The latest partnership underscores Uber’s ongoing strategy to play the field, rather than get too close to one autonomous driving provider. Uber is now working with Waymo in Austin and Atlanta, has a partnership with Lucid Motors via the “Nuro Driver,” and, eventually, freight services via Aurora—plus partnerships with
Pony.ai, WeRide, May Mobility, and others. The only prominent robotaxi company Uber isn’t working with right now is Tesla, which has thus far
rebutted Uber’s partnership offer and determined to go its own direction.
Zoox, which is owned by Amazon, has been slower to launch than competitors, and has wrestled with regulatory hurdles and safety reviews, but remains a clear innovator and frontrunner in the race to get self-driving vehicles on the roads. The company’s CEO, Aicha Evans, was one of three AV company representatives to speak at the White House’s AV Safety Forum in D.C. on Tuesday. While NHTSA Administrator Jonathan Morrison expressed enthusiasm regarding Zoox’s participation, the Department of Transportation was less enthusiastic about learning how to spell the company’s name. In a press release sent to reporters Wednesday, the agency twice referred to the company as “Zooks.”—
Jessica Mathews