Skip to content
Advertisement
When Appliance Fail?

Why safety regulators closed their investigation into Tesla’s remote parking feature

NHTSA closed its investigation into Tesla's "Actually Smart Summon" feature, saying that only a fraction of cases resulted in an incident, and that no incidents resulted in injury. Tesla has also issued a number of software updates.

schedule 18:17 visibility 79 views
Why safety regulators closed their investigation into Tesla’s remote parking feature
TechCrunch Source: TechCrunch

U.S. auto safety regulators closed its investigation into Tesla’s remote parking feature, known as “Actually Smart Summon,” after finding crashes were rare, at low speed, and not severe.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said in its update on Friday that its closing of the investigation does not constitute a finding that a safety-related defect does not exist and said it can reopen it.

The remote parking feature, which was released via a software update in September 2024, allows owners to use their Tesla app to direct the vehicle to drive itself to them at low speeds, using only the car’s cameras. The release was notable at the time because the previous version, Smart Summon, also used ultrasonic sensors, which are no longer on newer Tesla vehicles.

The NHTSA opened the investigation in January 2025 after reports of dozens of crashes involving the “Actually Smart Summon” feature. The investigation found that out of millions of Summon sessions, a fraction of 1% resulted in an incident, which typically involved minor property damage like hitting gates, parked cars, or bollards.

There were also “no reported incidents involving a vulnerable road user, injury, fatality, or major property damage as indicated by an air bag deployment or vehicle tow away,” according to the report.

The NHTSA found that either the person or the system using the app failed to fully detect surroundings, often due to limited visibility in the app’s camera view. Some incidents were caused by snow obstructing the camera, which the system failed to detect.

Tesla has issued a number of software updates to improve camera blockage detection and object recognition, according to the NHTSA.

Meet your next investor or portfolio startup at Disrupt

Meet your next investor or portfolio startup at Disrupt

TechCrunch

Originally published at

TechCrunch

open_in_new Read Full Article

Related Articles

Meta made its own AI-generated clickbait news feed
Technology

Meta made its own AI-generated clickbait news feed

Facebook has long been filled with feeds of clickbait articles. Now, Meta is making its own clickbait articles with AI. The standalone Meta AI app now has a "For You" section that populates a list of clickbait-style stories for you to read. But the...

The Verge
Here comes new Siri again
Technology

Here comes new Siri again

Apple has been on its back foot, AI-wise, for the past few years. But in a strange way, playing from behind might not be such a bad move. At WWDC on Monday, Apple appears to be getting ready to reintroduce us to the new Siri. Again. As a reminder...

The Verge

Read More

The next YouTube phenomenon hitting the big screen
Technology

The next YouTube phenomenon hitting the big screen

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 131, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you're new here, welcome, happy last week of productivity before the World Cup starts, and also you can read all the old editions at the...

The Verge
Your Appliance Broke?
Reliable Repair for