Elon Musk: Nvidia’s Self-Driving Tech Is Still Years From Challenging Tesla
Tesla CEO Elon Musk argued that Nvidia’s software has arrived years earlier than legacy automakers can deploy it at scale.
In brief
- Elon Musk says Nvidia’s autonomous driving software will not pressure Tesla for five to six years or longer.
- Nvidia unveiled Alpamayo, an open-source AI model family for self-driving systems, at CES 2026.
- Musk argues legacy automakers face long delays in integrating cameras and AI hardware at scale.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk said Nvidia’s latest autonomous driving software will not pose serious competitive pressure on Tesla for several years.
Nvidia showed off its new self-driving technology at CES 2026 on Monday.
The software centers around Alpamayo, an open-source family of AI models designed to handle complex urban driving using camera-based video input. The company demonstrated the system navigating a Mercedes car through city streets in Las Vegas.
But Musk said the software remains five to six years from posing a real threat to Tesla, citing the long gap between partial autonomy and a safer-than-human driving, fully self-driving vehicle, as well as slow hardware deployment by automakers.
“The actual time from when [a self-driving car] sort of works to where it is much safer than a human is several years,” Musk wrote. He added that legacy automakers face an additional delay because of the time required to design and integrate cameras and AI computers into production vehicles at scale.
Despite Musk’s comments, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised Tesla’s self-driving technology as “the most advanced AV stack in the world.”
“I think Elon’s approach is about as state-of-the-art as anybody knows of autonomous driving and robotics,” Huang told Bloomberg. “It’s a stack that’s hard to criticize. I wouldn’t criticize it. I would just encourage them to continue to do what they’re doing.”
During a Keynote speech at CES, Huang said the chip manufacturer's work on self-driving cars goes back nearly a decade.
“We started working on self-driving cars eight years ago, and the reason for that is because we reasoned early on that deep learning and artificial intelligence were going to reinvent the entire computing stack,” he said. “And if we were ever going to understand how to navigate and how to guide the industry towards this new future, we have to get good at building the entire stack.”
Progress stalls
However, advances in autonomous driving have not reduced the challenges for the budding industry.
Waymo, which operates fully driverless robotaxis in several U.S. cities, recently issued a voluntary software recall in December after vehicles failed to stop for school buses.