- Waymo’s new Mesa, Arizona factory will add over 2,000 robotaxis by 2026, doubling its fleet.
- New production processes enable vehicles to enter service within 30 minutes of assembly.
- The plant is built for future expansion, supporting multiple vehicle platforms and rapid deployment.
Waymo is ramping up its robotaxi ambitions, announcing a major expansion of its autonomous fleet through a new 239,000-square-foot factory in Mesa, Arizona.
The Alphabet-owned company now operates over 1,500 commercial robotaxis and is investing millions with manufacturing partner Magna International to build over 2,000 additional Jaguar I-Pace vehicles by 2026.
This move will bring Waymo’s total fleet to around 3,500 vehicles, supporting its growing ride-hail services in Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Austin, with plans to expand to Atlanta, Miami, and Washington, D.C.
The Mesa facility is strategically located near key markets and benefits from consistent weather, ideal for validating autonomous vehicles before public use.
Waymo brings a new production process to the spotlight, which allows vehicles to drive themselves out of the factory and begin passenger service within 30 minutes, dramatically reducing time from assembly to deployment.
Vehicles that are destined for other cities can be shipped and operational within hours.
The factory is designed with future scalability in mind, featuring automated assembly lines and the flexibility to integrate new vehicle platforms, including the upcoming Zeekr RT equipped with Waymo’s sixth-generation self-driving system.
At full capacity, the plant could produce tens of thousands of robotaxis annually.
Waymo’s expansion comes as demand for autonomous ride-hailing grows, with the company currently providing 250,000 paid, driverless rides each week.
The Arizona plant cements Waymo’s position as a leader in the U.S. robotaxi market, enabling rapid scaling and faster deployment of next-generation autonomous vehicles.
Edited by Annette George