Morgan Stanley analysts say the robotaxi industry is moving from limited pilots into early commercialisation and may evolve into a distributed mobility network rather than centralized deployments. They project a global fleet of roughly 2.5 million vehicles by 2035 and see about a $1 trillion market opportunity by 2040. Unit economics are expected to reach break-even around 2028, with mass commercial operations by 2030. Advances in AI, falling hardware costs and clearer regulation are acceleratin

2026-07-06

Morgan Stanley analysts say the robotaxi industry is moving from limited pilots into early commercialisation and may evolve into a distributed mobility network rather than centralized deployments. They project a global fleet of roughly 2.5 million vehicles by 2035 and see about a $1 trillion market opportunity by 2040. Unit economics are expected to reach break-even around 2028, with mass commercial operations by 2030. Advances in AI, falling hardware costs and clearer regulation are accelerating deployments; some operators already run 24/7 driverless services in select cities. The bank says investor focus is shifting from technical feasibility to identifying operators most likely to scale efficiently and profitably.