Tesla-owners-in-Europe-celebrate-getting-FSD-—-but-some.jpeg

Tesla owners in Europe celebrate getting FSD — but some say they’re still waiting

After years of delays and missed deadlines, Tesla’s full self-driving tech has finally launched in Europe — and owners are celebrating.

Last week, the RDW, the Netherlands auto regulator, approved the driver-assist system that Tesla says allows its EVs to drive themselves almost anywhere under human supervision.

It marked the culmination of a long campaign that saw Tesla navigate what Elon Musk described as a “layer cake of bureaucracy.” Until now, European owners have been stuck with a more limited version of Tesla’s driver-assist software that can’t handle intersections or change lanes on its own.

For Tesla’s European fans, some of whom have been waiting nearly a decade to get access to FSD, the excitement of taking the tech for a spin for the first time was high.

“It’s like stepping into the future. It’s amazing,” said Tim de Kraker, a venture developer from Zutphen in the Netherlands, who used his FSD first test-drive to take his son to school.

Navigating the tight streets of Amsterdam and other Dutch cities — where bike lanes, tram routes, and pedestrian crossings interweave into a tangled web that can flummox experienced human drivers — poses perhaps the toughest challenge yet for FSD.

While all four drivers Business Insider spoke to said they encountered no safety issues or major interventions, some said FSD was still getting used to the local quirks of Dutch roads, such as complex roundabouts, which are rare in the US but ubiquitous in Europe.

Patrick Sannes, a Model Y owner who lives near the city of Gouda in the Netherlands, said that when he encountered a roundabout while FSD was driving him home from work on Monday, the software became confused by roadworks on the side of the road — and failed to exit the roundabout.

“I did three turns on the roundabout, and then I decided to drive off myself,” he said.

Sannes said his FSD-equipped Tesla has otherwise handled roundabouts, country lanes, and highway driving almost flawlessly, with only a few minor interventions due to overly hesitant driving.

Having waited seven years for FSD to launch in Europe, he said he was thrilled to finally surrender the wheel to the AI driver.

“It’s worth the wait, but I would’ve loved it to be faster,” Sannes said.

Alex Nichiporchik, CEO at video game developer tinyBuild and a Tesla owner for 10 years, told Business Insider that he had been impressed with FSD so far — even if the technology occasionally struggled with roundabouts, and had a tendency to frustrate other drivers by always giving way to bicycles, regardless of whether they have right of way or not.

“I’d say that in the US right now, FSD drives much better than I do. But here you can tell that it’s still learning,” Nichiporchik, who lives in the Netherlands and the US, said.

Unlike their US counterparts, European FSD owners downloading the software for the first time are asked to watch a video and complete a two-question quiz before they can begin using it.

This quiz — which asks drivers to identify when FSD is active and confirm they are responsible for supervising it — is likely a response to European regulations that require manufacturers to educate consumers about the limits of driver-assist tech.

Nichiporchik also said that instead of speed profiles such as sloth, chill, hurry, and “Mad Max,” the European version of FSD instead allows drivers to set a maximum speed that specifies how far over the limit they want it to drive.

“The rules here are much stricter than in the US, especially where I live in Florida,” Nichiporchik said, adding he thought having FSD in Europe would be “life-changing.”

Speaking over the phone while being driven by FSD, entrepreneur and founder Thijs van Schadewijk told Business Insider he had immediately put the software to the test by driving through the busiest parts of Amsterdam.

“There were tourists walking around your car, bicycles and cars everywhere,” he said.


Thijs van Schadewijk Tesla

Thijs van Schadewijk has owned four Teslas since buying his first in 2015. 

Thijs van Schadewijk



Van Schadewijk’s Model Y handled the congested canal-side streets with ease, he said, bar one moment where he had to take over after it tried to reverse out of a busy intersection.

“I’m very excited that we now have it. And this is the worst version of FSD we will ever have,” he said.

Some Tesla owners miss out

Even as many Tesla owners celebrate FSD’s long-overdue arrival, some are missing out.

The rollout appears to be limited to Tesla owners with more recent versions of the company’s hardware — known as Hardware 4 — with vehicles built before 2023 not receiving the update.

In the US, Tesla vehicles with pre-2023 hardware — known as Hardware 3 — can only access a more limited version of FSD.

Musk previously acknowledged it’s possible that these older vehicles may not have the hardware to handle fully “unsupervised FSD,” and said Tesla would provide physical upgrades to all Hardware 3 owners if that is the case.

Mischa Sigtermans, an executive at Amsterdam-based Ryde Ventures who bought his Model 3 in 2019, feels like he’s waited long enough.

After FSD began rolling out in the Netherlands without Hardware 3 support, he started a website to gather European Tesla owners to explore potential legal action over what he says are the company’s broken promises.

“At some point, I lost trust in Tesla,” Sigtermans told Business Insider.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.


Mischa Sigtermans Tesla

Mischa Sigtermans with his Tesla Model 3. 

Mischa Sigtermans



The Model 3 owner, who bought FSD in 2019, said that Tesla’s marketing material at the time explicitly stated that his vehicle’s hardware would be capable of supporting Full Self-Driving in the future.

Speaking on Wednesday, Sigtermans said he now had around 500 verified Tesla owners sign up to potentially participate in the collective claim via the website. That number has now grown to around 1,900, per a tracker on Sigtermans’ site.

“You can’t keep this up for seven years. I would rather hear them say something like, ‘yeah, we can’t make this promise’ and communicate about it,” he said.

Tesla owners in Europe can transfer FSD from one vehicle to another, according to the company’s website. Tesla removed this option in the US in March.

Sigtermans said he shouldn’t have to buy a new car to access software he paid 6,800 euros ($8,050) for years ago, and pointed to Musk’s history of making overly optimistic promises on Tesla’s FSD rollout.

“It’s just the promise of this specific car that they made that they can’t deliver. And it’s honestly not my problem to get a new car to get FSD working. That’s their promise and their problem,” he said.




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My dad died 3 years ago. I’m learning how to celebrate the holidays without him.

Walking by the holiday decorations, I see the lights. It’s hard to miss them since they’re everywhere — blinking from plastic trees and dangling from the ceiling. It’s undoubtedly a well-lit wonderland, but I don’t stop to look. That is, I can’t stop.

The colored lights are an instant reminder of my dad. Memories of him carefully placing his favorite strings of blue lights on our tree bring a jagged emptiness. It’s been three years since my father died unexpectedly, and the holidays continue to deliver quite the gut punch.

I’m learning what to do with my holiday grief

Holiday grief is something I didn’t anticipate unwrapping every year. When my father passed away from a sudden heart attack, my family fell into a kind of shock. He was in good health and only a few months before, had a routine checkup with no abnormalities. His passing didn’t make sense.

In the weeks after he left us, we did all the things you do, helping my mom as best we could, but we weren’t prepared. Now, I’m a statistic fitting in with the 76% of adults who’ve lost a parent before age 59, and the 36% who don’t want to celebrate the holidays due to feelings of grief. I am 100% certain that I haven’t figured out how to do the holidays without him.

It’s the seemingly insignificant things that sneak up and trigger my grief: My first Christmas without him, I walked past the kitchen counter and, without thinking, looked for my great-grandmother’s cookie cutter. My dad used it to shape Oma’s cookies, and while he was cutting the dough, I’d hear him ask with a grin, “Did I ever tell you the story about when I was in high school, and Oma made me a secret plate of cookies?” Yes, every Christmas.

Then there were the batteries. As my dad tells it, when I was around 8, and my younger sister was 4, “Santa” forgot to buy batteries for our electronic presents. Batteries were definitely not included, and my dad drove to all the gas stations and grocery stores within a 30-mile radius only to find them closed, because, well, it was Christmas morning. “And that’s why I always have extra batteries,” Dad would explain as he slid open the stuffed-full (but well-organized) battery drawer.

These memories of cookies, batteries, and family stories all play on repeat in my head. The emptiness follows suit, and then the sadness takes its place. I can’t untangle my dad’s memories from any of our holiday rituals. So, how do I celebrate without him?

By telling family stories, I’m staying connected to my dad

Last year, my 11-year-old and I were enjoying the stillness by the Christmas tree when it occurred to me to ask: “Did you know Papa’s favorite colored lights were blue?” I told him how I grew up with all blue lights because Papa loved them so much. “And he had a system for stringing them closer to the trunk because Papa said, ‘It made the tree glow.'”

We sat together for a breath staring at the lights, and out of nowhere, my son flung his arms around my neck and gave me a surprise hug. “I like Papa’s stories,” he whispered. And just like that, a new tradition was born. My dad told the stories that meant the most to him, and now I have ones to add — all about my father. Family stories keep us connected, and it’s this ritual that helps me through the holidays. So, I’ll keep going.

“Did you hear the one about the time Oma made a secret plate of cookies for your Papa,” I asked. When my son looked up, the glow of the blue lights reflected in his eyes, and for an instant, I felt like maybe Papa wasn’t as far away as I thought.




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