Waymo self-driving cars hit London streets in preparation for 2026 launch – Bundlezy

Waymo self-driving cars hit London streets in preparation for 2026 launch

Waymo self-driving car on Abbey Road in London. Waymo self-driving cars have been spotted being tested in London as the company gears up to launch passenger service next year.The company, a subsidiary of Google?s parent company, shared a photo on social media of one of its self-driving Jaguar I-Pace cars as it drives past the iconic Abbey Road zebra crossing.It wrote: ?The Waymo Driver has landed in London!?We?re now driving in London as we prepare to bring the safety, reliability and magic of our autonomous ride-hail service to the city next year.? Photo released 10/12/2025
A Waymo self-driving car passing over the famous Abbey Road crossing in London (Picture: Waymo/SWNS)

Waymo self-driving cars are being trialled in London, as the firm gets ready to launch a passenger service next year.

The US company posted a photo of one of its Jaguar I-Pace vehicles driving over the famous Abbey Road zebra crossing.

‘The Waymo Driver has landed in London!’ it wrote alongside the picture.

‘Our vehicles are now driving on public roads as we prepare to bring the magic of Waymo to the city in 2026.’

On its website, the company says the Waymo driver ‘never gets distracted or tired, providing a consistent level of safety to help reduce human-driven vehicle-related collisions’.

A combination of lindar, cameras and radar, give the fully electric cars their ‘360° sight’, the website says, with AI predicting ‘every move, seeing hundreds of metres away’.

During its London trial, ‘safety drivers’ are behind the wheel, but when the service is fully rolled out next year it’s expected the vehicles will be fully autonomous.

28 MAY 2025, Austin, TX, USA - Inside of a Waymo autonamous taxi car during a ride arouns Austin Texas
Inside of a Waymo autonamous taxi car in Austin, Texas (Picture: Getty Images)

Waymo, set up as a spin-off from Google’s self-driving car programme -launched its driverless taxi service in 2020, and currently operates in San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles and Atlanta.

The company has amassed a fleet of more than 2,000 cars, and, according to its end of year report, has facilitated around 14 million trips in 2025.

The company said that during the current trial, testing, mapping, and ‘safety validation work’ will be carried out in Barking and Dagenham, Brent, Camden, Ealing, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Lambeth, Lewisham, Newham, Redbridge, Southwark, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster, and the City of London.

Waymo’s expansion to the UK is part of a pilot project approved by the government, and will make the country the first European nation to test driverless taxis.

Uber and the UK tech company Wayve are also planning to trial driverless taxis in London next year.

Some experts have questioned how prepared London is for autonomous taxis.

San Francisco, CA, USA - August 6, 2023: Aerial view of Alphabet's Waymo self-driving car fleet storage facility in the Bayview Hunter's Point district just before the California Public Utilities Commission is set to vote to allow Waymo and Cruise the ability to charge fares in San Francisco for complete driverless rides in the City.
Waymo vehicles in San Francisco (Picture: Getty Images)

A study by Nationwide Vehicle Contracts found the capital had a relatively high readiness for becoming a driverless city in terms of technology, such as gigabyte broadband capability (though still lower than many other UK cities).

However, director of the firm, Keith Hawes, fears UK roads are less suitable for driverless vehices than in the US.

‘The latest Waymo announcement is exciting, but London’s real test will begin when the driverless taxis hit the busy roads,’ he said.  

‘At the moment, driverless taxis operating in the US have the benefit of straighter and wider roads.

‘However, the UK’s ringroads, country lanes and sharp bends are likely to pose greater navigational challenges.’

His fears were echoed Jonny Berry, head of decarbonisation, innovation and strategy at Novuna Vehicle Solutions, who said: ‘Typically, narrower UK roads, especially in rural or older urban areas leave less margin for autonomous vehicles to manoeuvre, requiring ultra-precise path planning and perception systems.’

Mr Berry also said ‘distinctive road signage, unique lane markings and signal sequences in the UK mean AV systems trained in the US must be recalibrated’.

Even if US roads are better suited to driverless cars, the rollout hasn’t been without its issues.

Some Waymo vehicles have, for example, disobeyed traffic rules, such as driving past stopped school buses, and last week, a female Waymo discovered a man hiding in her vehicle’s boot.

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In a video, the woman can be heard asking the man why he’s in the boot to which he replies he was put there by ‘the people’.

There have also been fears over major job losses, with Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi acknowledging self-driving cars could eventually leave many taxi drivers unemployed.

Speaking at a summit hosted by the “All-In” podcast in September, he said it’s unlikely jobs would be seriously affected in the short term future, but predicted ’10 to 15 years from now, this is going to be a real issue’.

He added he didn’t have a ‘neat answer’ for the problem

The UK government, however, says the self-driving vehicle sector could create 38,000 jobs in other areas and be worth up to £42 billion to the UK economy by 2035.

Roles are expected in communications, AI, cybersecurity, and maintenance, with support centers and charging facilities also creating employment.

In October, the Metro tested out a driverless car. You can read more about the experience here.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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