FSD Collisions in Reduced Roadway Visibility Conditions
NHTSA investigated and closed this without ordering a recall.
- Manufacturer
- Tesla, Inc.
- Component
- ELECTRICAL SYSTEM:ADAS
- Opened
- Oct 17, 2024
- Closed
- Mar 18, 2026
- Model years
- 2016–2024
- Type
- Preliminary Evaluation
Summary
On October 17, 2024, NHTSAâs Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) opened a Preliminary Evaluation (PE24031) of Teslaâs Full Self Driving Beta and Full Self Driving (Supervised) (collectively, FSD) to assess: the ability of the FSD system to detect and respond appropriately to reduced roadway visibility conditions; whether any other FSD crashes had occurred under degraded roadway visibility conditions that are similar in nature to the four SGO-reported crashes identified in the opening document, and if so, the contributing circumstances for each of those crashes; and any updates or modifications by Tesla to the FSD system that may affect the performance of FSD in degraded roadway visibility conditions, including the timing, purpose, and capabilities of any such updates, and Teslaâs assessment of their safety impact. Teslaâs FSD is an advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) that relies exclusively on vision-based cameras and the related FSD software to detect and respond to the roadway ahead, projecting a path forward based on traffic control devices, vehicles, pedestrians, and the roadway itself. During this phase of the investigation, ODI reviewed the materials provided by Tesla detailing any actions taken, or changes, modifications, and updates made that may relate to the alleged defect. ODI reviewed information related to Teslaâs transition to a vision-only perception system, and its deployment of the strategy in vehicles. ODIâs findings include information on limitations of the vision-only perception system and updates made in response to known subject crashes. When Tesla began transitioning away from using both cameras and radars to an exclusively camera-based approach, known as Tesla Vision, in mid-2021, it developed and implemented a degradation detection system that it deployed by a software update to existing and new Tesla vehicles. On June 28, 2024, the day after Tesla submitted the SGO report of the November 28, 2023 fatal crash listed in this document, Tesla began developing an update to the degradation detection system. ODI reviewed certain public statements, including those made during an April 2025 earnings call, in which Tesla stated that it had developed a breakthrough âdirect photon-countingâ capability that eliminates the degradation that the camera-based system experiences when glare is encountered. At this time, ODI does not have information on when the update was deployed and which vehicles have the updated system. ODI has discussed individual incidents and its initial findings with Tesla. Based on Teslaâs post-incident analysis, the update to the degradation detection system, had it been installed on the vehicles at the time, may have affected 3 of the 9 incidents identified by ODI. Review of Teslaâs responses revealed additional crashes that occurred in similar environments and where the system either did not detect a degraded state, and/or it did not present the driver with an alert with adequate time for the driver to react. In each of these crashes, FSD also lost track of or never detected a lead vehicle in its path. Tesla also described internal data and labeling limitations that prevented a uniform identification and analysis of crash events with the subject system engaged. ODI believes this limitation could have led to under-reporting of subject crashes over portions of the defined time-period. Available incident data raise concerns that Teslaâs FSD system fails to detect and/or warn the driver appropriately under degraded visibility conditions such as glare and airborne obscurants where the camera-based system performance degrades significantly. In the crashes that ODI has reviewed, the FSD system did not detect common roadway conditions that impaired its visibility and/or provide alerts when camera performance had deteriorated until immediately before the crash occurred. ODI is upgrading this investigation (PE24031) to Engineering Analysis (EA) 26002 to further evaluate this matter. The crashes included in the failure report summary can be found at NHTSA.gov under the following SGO report identification numbers: 13781-8004, 13781-7181, 13781-7381, 13781-7767, 13781-7964, 13781-8977, 13781-9267.
Vehicles under investigation (33)
- TESLA CYBERTRUCK2023
- TESLA CYBERTRUCK2024
- TESLA MODEL 32017
- TESLA MODEL 32018
- TESLA MODEL 32019
- TESLA MODEL 32020
- TESLA MODEL 32021
- TESLA MODEL 32022
- TESLA MODEL 32023
- TESLA MODEL 32024
- TESLA MODEL S2016
- TESLA MODEL S2017
- TESLA MODEL S2018
- TESLA MODEL S2019
- TESLA MODEL S2020
- TESLA MODEL S2021
- TESLA MODEL S2022
- TESLA MODEL S2023
- TESLA MODEL S2024
- TESLA MODEL X2016
- TESLA MODEL X2017
- TESLA MODEL X2018
- TESLA MODEL X2019
- TESLA MODEL X2020
- TESLA MODEL X2021
- TESLA MODEL X2022
- TESLA MODEL X2023
- TESLA MODEL X2024
- TESLA MODEL Y2020
- TESLA MODEL Y2021
- TESLA MODEL Y2022
- TESLA MODEL Y2023
- TESLA MODEL Y2024
Source: NHTSA investigation PE24031. Investigations are NHTSA's review of a potential safety issue and may or may not result in a recall.