Picture this: your car zipping through traffic like it's got its own personal professional chauffeur, except the chauffeur is an AI that's never had a coffee break, never texts while driving, and never gets road rage. That's Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) dream in action, quietly chipping away at the planet's carbon footprint one autonomous, emission-free mile at a time. But actually getting to 10 million active FSD subscriptions? That's like trying to parallel-park a Cybertruck in downtown San Francisco during rush hour: ambitious, occasionally chaotic, and guaranteed to turn heads.
Tesla's push for widespread FSD adoption sits at the heart of its vision for sustainable mobility. Autonomous driving can optimize routes, reduce idling, and cut unnecessary trips, all while promoting efficient electric vehicle use over fossil-fuel alternatives. Yet the company faces real engineering, financial, and market hurdles on the road to this 10M milestone. Let's explore Tesla's path to 10 million active FSD subscriptions, tied to Elon Musk's high-stakes compensation package, current adoption realities, structural challenges, and potential breakthroughs like licensing.
Musk's Trillion-Dollar Carrot: The 2025 CEO Performance Award
Shareholders approved Elon Musk's 2025 CEO Performance Award in November 2025 with strong support. The package grants Musk the chance to earn up to roughly 423 million additional Tesla shares, potentially worth hundreds of billions of dollars (or even approaching $1 trillion in optimistic scenarios) if Tesla hits aggressive targets over a decade. Musk receives no base salary; everything hinges on performance.
The pay package is divided into 12 tranches. Many of the tranches are market capitalization milestones (starting at $2 trillion and climbing to $8.5 trillion). The other goals include cumulative vehicle deliveries of 20 million, 10 million active FSD subscriptions, 1 million Optimus bots delivered, 1 million robotaxis in operation, and escalating adjusted EBITDA thresholds.
The 10 million active FSD subscriptions goal ranks second on the list of operational milestones, right after 20 million vehicles delivered. Although the goals can be achieved in any order. Specifically, the tranche requires Tesla to achieve 10 million active FSD subscriptions as measured by daily active over a consecutive three-month period.
Where FSD Stands Today: Steady Growth, Low Penetration
As of the end of 2025, Tesla reported 1.1 million active FSD users globally. This figure marks a 38% jump from 800,000 in 2024, continuing an upward trend (see table below). Yet only about 30% represent true monthly subscriptions; the rest stem from one-time FSD purchases, which do not count toward the tranche.
FSD adoption hovers around 12% of Tesla's cumulative fleet (roughly 8.9 million vehicles delivered as of late 2025). The $99 monthly price for supervised FSD helps, but take rates remain modest due to price sensitivity, regulatory scrutiny, and prices will certainly change once Unsupervised FSD is available.
Here's a quick snapshot of the trajectory:
| Year | Active FSD Users Reported |
FSD Subscriptions | Year-over-Year Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 400,000 | 20,000 | base |
| 2022 | 500,000 | 50,000 | 25% |
| 2023 | 600,000 | 90,000 | 20% |
| 2024 | 800,000 | 160,000 | 33% |
| 2025 | 1,100,000 | 330,000 | 38% |
This growth shows promise, especially as Tesla shifted to subscription-only in early 2026 (ending one-time purchases after February 14, 2026).
Roadblocks Ahead: Deliveries, Robotaxis, and the Numbers Game
Hitting 10 million subscriptions without explosive vehicle growth looks tough. Tesla delivered about 1.64 million vehicles in 2025, a roughly 8.6% decline from 2024, marking two straight years of contraction. Projections for 2026 hover conservatively around 1.8 million (some optimistic models push toward 2 million), still far from the sustained annual growth pace needed to scale the subscriber base rapidly.
With no immediate affordable model launch, a surge in private vehicle sales is unlikely. Meaning the pool of potential FSD adopters (assuming 10-20% take rate) grows slowly.
Adding irony, another milestone (1 million robotaxis in commercial operation) could work against the FSD subscriptions goal. Tesla-owned fleet vehicles in Robotaxi service do not count toward the 10 million FSD subscriptions goal, as it requires external paid access. If Cybercab succeeds wildly, shared autonomy might reduce demand for personal ownership, shrinking the addressable market for individual subscriptions even as it delivers huge environmental wins through higher vehicle utilization and more electric cars on roads.
Simple math highlights the squeeze: at 1.8-2 million annual deliveries and 15% FSD adoption, new subscribers might add 270,000-300,000 yearly. If adoption rates and/or vehicle production don't increase, reaching 10 million from today's 330 thousand would take decades at that clip, especially if robotaxi fleets pull buyers away.
Licensing: The Potential Game-Changer
If 10 million from Tesla direct FSD subscriptions is nearly impossible within the decade of the pay package timeline, licensing offers a chance to boost the numbers. Unlike internal fleet units, FSD licenses to other automakers count toward the 10 million milestone. Partnerships with legacy players could put Tesla FSD-enabled vehicles from non-Tesla brands on the road. Tesla would collect a royalty on each subscription and provide FSD updates. Imagine Ford, GM, or Toyota fleets running Tesla's navigation and autonomy stack.
The problem with this is that Tesla only has a decade to get to 10 million subscribers and the legacy automakers do not move quickly.
Cybercab Fleet Backdoor
Another option (and maybe the most likely) is that Tesla will sell Cybercabs to 3rd party fleet managers to enroll in the Tesla Robotaxi network. The fleet managers will be the vehicle owners, and if you own a Cybercab, you must pay for an FSD subscription, or it's nearly worthless. The fleet managers will tend to their flock of Cybercabs, cleaning them between trips and putting them in the charging barn during their off shifts.
As we discussed here, Tesla could eventually sell 15 million Cybercabs per year. That would certainly get Musk to his tranche goal even if personal vehicle sales and FSD adoption stay flat and legacy automakers are slow or absent on the FSD uptake.
When Might We Hit 10 Million? A Grounded Guess
Realistically, if personal vehicle deliveries ramp modestly to 3 million annually by late this decade and adoption upticks to 50% as the FSD tech improves and more regions are included, direct FSD subscriptions could get to 5 million FSD subscriptions by 2035, leaving a 5 million gap.
An affordable vehicle release could greatly boost personal vehicle ownership. Tesla could use this method, but Musk has been laser-focused on autonomy, so (as much as I and many others would love a more affordable Tesla) this is unlikely.
Licensing could kick in by 2035, but Tesla cannot depend on others to adopt their technology. They prefer to own their own destiny. So, while licensing may occur, it is not the path that Musk will depend on. He has even said that he doesn't worry about legacy automakers stealing their ideas because they cannot get them to take the ideas when they are served up on a golden platter.
This leaves 3rd party Robotaxi fleets to cover the remaining 5 million vehicles. Tesla's Robotaxi service has been slow to expand, but it will likely be ubiquitous by 2035.
Conclusion: Charging Toward Cleaner Mobility
In the end, Tesla's quest for 10 million active FSD subscriptions blends bold ambition with stubborn practicalities. The path to FSD has been slow; innovation, technological progress, or disruptive change often feels painfully slow and incremental for a long time, then accelerates dramatically all at once. An overnight success, decades in the making, as the saying goes.
Whether through direct subscribers, licenses, or cyber fleets, hitting this milestone would mark a meaningful step toward a world with fewer auto crashes and fewer related deaths. Let's keep rooting for the tech to deliver.






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