Tesla’s FSD Safety Claims Face Fresh Doubt in Europe

Tesla has spent years telling the world its Full Self-Driving software makes roads safer. In Europe, the company took that message straight to regulators. The pitch didn’t land as planned.

Documents obtained through public records show Tesla presented self-published statistics to officials in the Netherlands and Sweden. Those numbers suggested vehicles running FSD could travel more than seven times farther between crashes than the average U.S. driver. The system, Tesla argued, could save 32,000 lives and prevent 1.9 million injuries. But independent experts saw something else. They saw selective comparisons that ignored key realities of actual traffic.

The revelations come at a delicate moment. Tesla holds approvals for FSD Supervised in several European countries, including the Netherlands, which granted national type approval in April 2026. Other nations such as Lithuania, Estonia, Denmark and Belgium have followed. Yet broader EU acceptance remains pending. Regulators there demand evidence, not promises. And the evidence Tesla supplied has drawn sharp criticism.

Questions Mount Over Data Methods

Ten of 11 traffic-safety researchers who reviewed Tesla’s approach called the statistics misleading marketing rather than credible analysis, according to a Reuters investigation published June 15, 2026. The core problem lies in the assumptions. Tesla’s figures rest on the idea that every vehicle on U.S. roads would be replaced by an FSD-equipped Tesla. That erases trucks, motorcycles and older cars with weaker safety records from the equation. The comparison also pits serious airbag-deployment crashes in Teslas against all reported U.S. crashes, including minor ones. The gap looks impressive. The methodology does not hold up.

Dudley Curtis of the European Transport Safety Council didn’t mince words. “Give the data to a university, have it independently verified by a qualified researcher, and then let’s talk,” he told Reuters. He expressed concern that Tesla presented “unreliable safety data” from the United States to European officials.

The Dutch road authority RDW approved FSD in April after its own testing. Officials there stress they do not rely on marketing claims or external statistics. They run tests, analyses and verifications on public roads and tracks. A Dutch transport minister later defended the decision, noting Tesla vehicles with FSD had covered 24 million miles on Dutch roads without noteworthy incidents. Still, the correspondence shows Tesla referenced its safety page in a November 2024 letter to RDW, asserting that increased FSD usage leads to safer roads.

In Sweden, Tesla policy manager Ivan Komusanac sent an email with a slide presentation. It repeated the seven-times-safer claim and the potential lives-saved figures. Anders Eriksson at the Swedish Transport Agency responded carefully. Regulators “look beyond headline figures,” he said, and any assessment would rest on overall evidence, not aggregated safety claims alone.

Norway’s public roads administration struck a similar note. Stein-Helge Mundal pointed out that Tesla’s figures “are self-produced,” making correlation with official accident statistics difficult. Greek authorities took a different view. They cited data “from the other side of the Atlantic” showing a significant drop in accidents. The contrast highlights uneven scrutiny across borders.

But the Futurism article from June 17, 2026 captured the blunt reaction. Researchers called the numbers wildly misleading because they assume universal replacement by Tesla vehicles while ignoring trucks and motorcycles. Tesla did not respond to requests for comment from Reuters.

This isn’t the first time Tesla’s safety statistics have faced examination. A prior Reuters report from May 28, 2026, detailed how CEO Elon Musk and executives cited data claiming FSD up to 10 times safer than human drivers. That review found invalid comparisons that exaggerated performance. The same patterns appear in the European submissions.

And yet approvals continue to spread. As of mid-June 2026, five EU countries have greenlit FSD Supervised. Trackers show national approvals in the Netherlands, Lithuania, Estonia, Denmark and Belgium, with EU-wide rollout eyed for early 2027. The European Transport Safety Council sent letters to transport ministers on June 12 urging them to pause recognition until independent answers address outstanding safety questions.

Tesla needs this foothold. Sales in Europe dropped sharply last year amid political backlash and competition from Chinese electric vehicles. Executives see FSD as a differentiator. Wider approval could help reclaim market share. But regulators operate under strict rules. The UN Regulation and local testing requirements leave little room for self-reported headlines.

So what happens next? Sweden and the Netherlands have signaled they examine more than glossy slides. Other nations may follow the RDW model and conduct their own road and track evaluations. Independent verification, the kind Curtis called for, could settle the debate. Without it, skepticism will linger.

Tesla continues to collect real-world miles. Recent fleet data shared publicly for the Netherlands showed FSD performing strongly on both highways and other roads compared with manual driving using active safety features. Those numbers come from the same company. They face the same questions of transparency.

The gap between Tesla’s confidence and regulators’ caution defines this moment. One side presents bold projections of lives saved. The other demands data that stands up to peer review. Europe, known for rigorous automotive standards, now tests whether self-driving claims match reality. The outcome will shape not only Tesla’s future there but the path for automated systems across the continent.

Recent coverage reinforces the tension. An AutoWeek report from June 17, 2026 noted the company’s submitted information claimed vehicles with FSD travel more than seven times farther between crashes. Researchers again challenged the assumptions. The story echoes earlier findings but adds weight as approvals expand.

Industry observers watch closely. If Tesla’s data withstands deeper audits, FSD could accelerate across Europe. If not, regulators may tighten requirements and slow the rollout. Either way, the conversation has shifted from promises to proof. And proof, in this arena, takes more than a slide deck.


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