Tesla FSD (Supervised) Cleared for Dutch Roads — First European Country to Approve
Tesla Europe announced Friday that the Netherlands' RDW has approved Full Self-Driving (Supervised) for rollout, after an 18-month joint testing program. The decision triggers notifications to the European Commission and all 27 EU member states that could open a path to bloc-wide mutual recognition this summer.

Tesla announced Friday that its Full Self-Driving (Supervised) driver-assistance system has been approved for use in the Netherlands and will begin rolling out "in the country shortly." The post, from the official Tesla Europe, Middle East & Africa account, opens with the Dutch phrase "De toekomst van mobiliteit is aangebroken" — "the future of mobility has arrived" — and says FSD Supervised was "trained on billions of kilometers of real-world driving data" and "can drive you almost anywhere under your supervision – from residential roads to city streets & highways."
The approval makes the Netherlands the first European country to sign off on FSD (Supervised). It was issued by the RDW — the Rijksdienst voor het Wegverkeer, the Dutch national vehicle type-approval authority — after an 18-month joint testing program with Tesla that the regulator had publicly described on March 23, 2026 as being "in the final phase of the assessment process."
What FSD (Supervised) is — and isn't
"Supervised" is the key qualifier. FSD (Supervised) is an SAE Level 2 driver-assistance system: it can handle most driving tasks in most situations, but the human driver must remain fully attentive, with hands on or very near the wheel, ready to take over at any moment. It is not an autonomous-driving or self-driving system in the legal sense that applies to Waymo robotaxis or Mercedes-Benz's certified Level 3 Drive Pilot. Responsibility for the vehicle remains entirely with the driver.
In its Friday post, Tesla describes the system's capabilities in explicitly assisted terms — "under your supervision" — and does not claim unsupervised operation.
The 18-month RDW review
Tesla and RDW began a joint testing program roughly 18 months before Friday's decision. According to Tesla's earlier European account posts and regulator statements, the testing covered more than 1.6 million kilometers of FSD (Supervised) operation on EU roads, more than 13,000 customer ride-alongs, and more than 4,500 track test scenarios. The type approval falls under UN Regulation 171, the international framework covering Driver Control Assistance Systems, together with Article 39 exemptions under EU type-approval rules.
In its March 23 statement, the RDW said it had departed from its usual practice of not publicly commenting on manufacturer applications because of the "significant public and media interest" in the Tesla submission. It also emphasized that "road safety is paramount" in its evaluation and that it had "thoroughly researched" the system on both its test track and public roads over the 18-month period.
Why one country's decision matters across the EU
EU type approval works on a principle of mutual recognition. When one national type-approval authority — in this case the RDW — issues a type approval, it notifies the European Commission and the other 26 member states. Those member states can then recognize the approval nationally, on their own timelines, without having to repeat the full assessment. A separate, slower track exists for formal EU-wide harmonization under UN R-171, which Tesla and industry observers have suggested could land as early as this summer.
In practical terms, this means Dutch Tesla drivers will get access first, and drivers in other EU states will get it as their own national authorities individually recognize the Dutch type approval.
The US-Europe gap, narrowing
FSD (Supervised) has been deployed in North America since 2020 and has been the subject of ongoing regulatory scrutiny by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Tesla has repeatedly pushed back the promised European launch — most recently in March 2026, when the Netherlands approval had been expected earlier and was then rescheduled to April 10. Friday's announcement closes that specific delay, though Tesla has not disclosed the initial price, subscription terms, or which vehicle variants will receive the feature in the Netherlands.
Tesla Europe's post says the company is "excited to bring FSD Supervised to more European countries soon."