According to Tesla influencer Sawyer Merritt on the social network X, the company is now apparently introducing two levels of cleaning fees for users of its Robotaxi service. The level of clutter depends on how much cleaning it actually requires. If a vehicle user spills liquid, smokes cigarettes, vomits, or makes a mess significant enough to dirty the interior, they can now be charged up to $150.
When vacuuming is needed because of something like spilled fries or dirt left behind, it will cost $50. However, in the case of vomiting, the fee is significantly higher, and this also applies to people who smoke in the car. Tesla says anyone who makes a big enough mess can expect to pay up to a $150 cleanup fee.
What is fascinating here is not the fee itself. That’s nothing new for any ride-hailing service, but it somewhat undermines Tesla’s carefully crafted vision that seamless autonomy will be cheaper and easier than ever.
Tesla presented the Robotaxi as a vehicle capable of cleaning and charging itself without any human intervention. This would make much of fleet management (the hardest part of any ride-hailing service) easy; however, in typical Tesla fashion, the automaker’s long-term vision is easy to promise but harder to deliver.
The automaker’s Robotaxi-branded vehicles, which are still technically partially automated today, still require a significant amount of human intervention for things like cleaning and charging. That means the cars can’t actually pull into an automated platform and clean themselves, at least not yet, which could be why Tesla justifies the fee until it perfects this area of its business.




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