How Free-Wheeling Texas Became The Self-Driving Trucking Industry's Promised Land

Vast highways, a booming freight market and, crucially, the least restrictive laws governing autonomous vehicles (AVs) in the United States have turned Texas into the industry's most desired location.
Several companies, including Aurora Innovation and TuSimple, plan to deploy fully driverless trucks on Texas' interstates next year, moving away from current testing that includes back-up safety drivers behind the wheel.
While some limited driverless tests with 18-wheelers have taken place in Arizona, a launch in Texas would mark the first commercial use. Alphabet's Waymo Via and box truck startup Gatik which counts Wal-Mart as a customer, are setting up hubs there in preparation.
Companies have poured billions of dollars into developing the technology they say will increase road safety and alleviate truck driver shortages. The self-driving truck industry in the U.S. is expected to rapidly grow over the next decade, with analysts estimating its size at between $250 billion and $400 billion by 2030.
Darran Anderson, director of innovation at the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), said the state has decided to pursue a collaborative approach with the industry.
But safety advocates are worried.
"Rushing this technology to market using regular drivers as beta testers in real-world driving conditions puts potentially everyone at risk," said Ware Wendel, executive director of consumer advocate Texas Watch.
The Texas Department of Public Safety, which regulates AVs, did not respond to a request for comment.
Texas in 2017 passed its autonomous vehicle bill permitting the testing and deployment of driverless vehicles without the need for special registration, data-sharing or additional insurance requirements. The law also prevents local cities from imposing additional requirements.
The industry is using the bill as a blueprint when lobbying other states about regulating self-driving vehicles, a Gatik executive and safety researchers said.
Safety proponents warn the companies are trying to pit states against each other by threatening to take jobs to more favorable regulatory environments.
The companies say safety is their highest priority, and testing on public roads allows them to fine-tune and scale their technology under real-world conditions.
There is no known case of an autonomous vehicle-caused crash in Texas, but the state leads the U.S. in yearly fatal trucking crashes, according to U.S. Transportation Department (DOT) data.
Texas boasts some of the country's fastest-growing metropolitan areas as well as several entry ports from Mexico. It also sits in the middle of one of the busiest U.S. freight routes, Atlanta-Los Angeles, which carries more than 8,500 trucks daily, according to the U.S. DOT. Self-driving companies hope to automate many of those highways.
Property developer Hillwood's huge AllianceTexas logistics zone near Fort Worth, which includes a freight airport, rail yard and vast regional hubs of Amazon.com, FedEx and UPS, hopes to attract more AV trucking.
TuSimple and Gatik have hubs at the 27,000-acre complex. Hillwood is creating robotruck-friendly infrastructure by minimizing left turns that are more complex because they cut through traffic, installing 5G networks and building AV-specific warehouse docks, said Ian Kinne, Hillwood's logistics innovation director.
For trucking companies, Texas' collaborative regulatory regime explains much of its attraction.
"There are other states that have really great ports or connections, but they don't have the same regulatory environment that Texas has," said Aidan Ali-Sullivan, Waymo's state policy manager.
With federal AV regulation stalled for several years, it has been left to individual states to figure out policies.
Graphic on U.S. AV regulation: https://tmsnrt.rs/3NTJMFo
Waymo, Aurora, TuSimple and Gatik said they are in constant contact with Texas state and local officials.
"The state is not being laissez-faire about the operation of these vehicles, they have to comply with traffic laws," TxDOT's Anderson said.
The state created an industry task force with some 200 members, including AV companies, automakers, researchers and regulators, with the goal of preparing Texas for self-driving vehicles.
The industry has been lobbying other states such as Kansas, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania to copy this approach.
"It's a well-structured model and approach for other states to adopt," said Richard Steiner, Gatik's policy chief.
Kansas signed its own bill into law last month. The governor's office could not be reached for comment.
Carnegie Mellon engineering professor Phil Koopman, who tracks AV regulation, opposed bills in Kansas and Pennsylvania.
"Even if (the companies) have the best of intentions, they face unimaginable economic pressure to cut corners," he said.
Greg Winfree, agency director of Texas A&M University's Transportation Institute, said he saw no indication companies were rolling out their technology irresponsibly.
Winfree, also part of the state-led AV task force, is now working on campaigns to inform Texans about the technology that will soon be among them.
"We need to get to a point where seeing a self-driving vehicle is not a cause for alarm, or photo taking and filming," he said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Latest News
Bilal Firfiray | Mar 7, 2026Toyota Rumion Gets New Base E Variant, Prices Now Start At Rs 9.56 LakhToyota has launched a new base E variant of the Rumion at Rs 9.56 lakh, reducing the MPV’s entry price by Rs 95,000.1 min read
car&bike Team | Mar 6, 2026QJ Motor SRK 421 RR Unveiled In EuropeThe SRK 421 RR is powered by a high-revving, liquid-cooled, 421 cc, inline-four engine which makes 76 bhp at 14,000 rpm and 39 Nm at 13,000 rpm.1 min read
Shams Raza Naqvi | Mar 6, 2026Batman Returns: Mahindra To Reopen Bookings For BE 6 Batman EditionMahindra had first launched the Batman in August 2025 when all 999 units got sold out in no time.2 mins read
car&bike Team | Mar 6, 2026JSW’s Creta Electric Rival Spotted: Chery Jaecoo J5 Undergoes Testing In PuneThe upcoming JSW Motors SUV will be based on the Jaecoo J5 that is built by China’s Chery Automobile.1 min read
car&bike Team | Mar 6, 2026Affordable New Honda Electric Motorcycle Revealed In PatentsPatent images reveal what appears to be Honda’s future strategy for the electric motorcycle segment – another low-cost electric motorcycle.3 mins read
Jaiveer Mehra | Mar 5, 2026Fourth-Gen Honda Insight Reborn As All-Electric CrossoverHonda claims the EV will offer a cruising range of over 500 km on the WLTC cycle.3 mins read
Bilal Firfiray | Feb 28, 2026Tata Punch EV Facelift Review: More Range, More Sense, Less MoneyThe Tata Punch EV facelift gets a bigger 40 kWh battery, faster 60 kW DC charging, improved thermal management, and better real-world range, and all of that at a lower introductory price. But does it become a more complete package now?6 mins read
Preetam Bora | Feb 24, 2026Hero Destini 110 Review: Simplicity, RefinedThe Hero Destini 110 is a no-nonsense commuter that is simple, comfortable and above all, fuel efficient. In 2026, when buyers are spoilt for choice, is it good enough to consider?6 mins read
Preetam Bora | Feb 23, 2026TVS Apache RTX Road Test Review: Redefining the Entry-Level ADVAfter spending some time with the TVS Apache RTX in traffic, the daily commute, as well as on open highways, one thing becomes clear: the RTX is trying to redefine the entry-level ADV segment. But is it without fault?1 min read
Girish Karkera | Feb 20, 2026Road Test: 2025 VinFast VF7 AWD Sky InfinityFlagship all-electric SUV from the Vietnamese car maker gets most of the basics right.1 min read
Jaiveer Mehra | Feb 18, 2026New BMW X3 30 Vs Mercedes-Benz GLC 300: Midsize Luxury SUV FaceoffWith the new X3 30, BMW has a direct competitor to the petrol GLC 300, but which is the luxury SUV for you?1 min read


















































































































