In short: Volkswagen’s autonomous mobility subsidiary MOIA America and Uber have begun on-road testing in Los Angeles with roughly 10 autonomous ID. Buzz vehicles, the opening phase of a deployment that is scheduled to offer commercial rides with human safety operators by the end of 2026, and fully driverless service in 2027. Los Angeles is the first US city in what the two companies describe as a multi-city rollout over the coming decade.
A year after Volkswagen and Uber announced the partnership, the first ID. Buzz AD vehicles are physically on the streets of Los Angeles. MOIA America, the name under which Volkswagen’s autonomous driving unit is operating in the US, says it will eventually deploy more than 100 vehicles in the city for real-world validation before commercial service opens. The test fleet will carry a human safety operator in every vehicle throughout the current phase, a standard precondition as the company works through California’s layered regulatory requirements before it can charge passengers for rides.
What the vehicle actually is
The ID. Buzz AD is a different proposition from the consumer-facing version of the ID. Buzz that Volkswagen sells in showrooms. The autonomous variant has been fitted with a 27-sensor suite integrating 13 cameras, nine LiDAR units, and five radars, with all sensor data fed into a Mobileye-sourced computer running the Mobileye Drive platform. That partnership, which replaced an earlier arrangement with Argo AI after Volkswagen wrote off that investment in 2022, gives Mobileye responsibility for the software, hardware components, and digital mapping that form the vehicle’s decision-making layer.

The production vehicle seats up to six passengers and is fitted with powered sliding doors, which makes it more practical than a standard saloon for the group ride-hailing use case MOIA has been building towards since its founding. The vehicle was first shown in series production configuration in 2025 and is manufactured by Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles at its Hanover plant.
The road to commercial service
Before MOIA America can collect fares from passengers in California, it must clear two separate regulatory gates: a commercial deployment permit from the California Department of Motor Vehicles, and a ride-hailing permit from the California Public Utilities Commission. Neither is a formality. The current testing phase, in which safety operators are present in every vehicle, is partly a technical validation exercise and partly a demonstration of safe operation that regulators will scrutinise before granting broader permissions.
The company’s published timeline is ambitious. Testing at the current scale, with around 10 vehicles, is followed by an expansion to more than 100 vehicles with safety operators by the time commercial service opens at the end of 2026. A fully driverless service — without any human in the vehicle — is targeted for 2027. MOIA America has stated an intention to scale to more than 500 autonomous vehicles in Los Angeles by the third quarter of 2027, and to deploy more than 1,000 vehicles across additional US cities after that.
Paul DeLong, president of commercialization at MOIA America, described the geographic choice as deliberate: “Los Angeles is a natural market to introduce MOIA’s autonomous vehicles for ride experiences, given its long history of shaping car culture and embracing new mobility technologies.” He added that the partnership with Uber was central to the strategy from the outset: “Together with Uber, we’re bringing MOIA’s autonomous vehicles and expertise onto a platform millions of riders already use and trust.”
Sascha Meyer, chief commercial officer for Volkswagen Autonomous Mobility, said the LA announcement reflected “strong momentum behind the strategy to bring autonomous mobility into real-world operation.” Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, called the development “a significant milestone in the advancement of autonomous mobility” and described it as reflecting “both Volkswagen’s and Uber’s shared dedication to building the future of transportation.”
Why LA, why now
Los Angeles is not a blank slate for autonomous vehicle services. Waymo has been operating fully driverless rides in the city since 2024 and has expanded its permitted territory to cover most of Southern California, running more than 250,000 paid trips per week across all its US markets. Entering a city where the incumbent is already operating at meaningful scale sets a clear performance benchmark for MOIA and Uber to meet before commercial launch. It also means riders in the city will have a direct comparison available from day one.
MOIA has operational experience that other new entrants to US cities lack. The company has been running a ride-pooling service in Hamburg since 2019 and has transported more than ten million passengers to date, providing a body of real-world operational data that informs both its vehicle design and its service model. The autonomous programme in Hamburg has been running concurrently as part of the federally supported ALIKE project, meaning the Los Angeles vehicles are not the first time the ID. Buzz AD platform has operated in a commercial context with the public.
Uber as the platform, not the technology
The MOIA partnership is one instance of a broader strategy Uber has been executing since stepping back from developing its own self-driving technology following the sale of its Advanced Technologies Group to Aurora in 2020. Uber has structured itself as the distribution layer for autonomous vehicles rather than a developer of the underlying technology, partnering with whichever companies can supply safe, commercially viable vehicles in specific markets.
The roster of those partners has grown substantially. Uber relaunched its Motional robotaxi service in Las Vegas following Motional’s $550 million Series B funding round in August 2025, with Motional targeting a fully driverless commercial service by the end of 2026. Uber, Wayve, and Nissan announced plans to pilot a robotaxi service in Tokyo using Wayve’s AI Driver system fitted to Nissan LEAF electric vehicles, with deployment targeted for late 2026 pending regulatory approval. MOIA America in Los Angeles adds a third geography and a third technology partner to that expanding network.
The business logic is consistent across each arrangement: Uber contributes demand, brand recognition, and the logistics infrastructure for dispatching and managing a fleet; the autonomous vehicle partner contributes the technology and the vehicles. Uber’s broader infrastructure investment, including its AI infrastructure partnership with AWS, provides the cloud and compute layer that ties dispatch, routing, and vehicle management together across an increasingly complex multi-partner, multi-city network. The ID. Buzz vehicles arriving in Los Angeles are the latest addition to a platform that Uber is assembling piece by piece, city by city, rather than building from a single vertically integrated stack.
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