Tesla (TSLA) officially ended the outright buying of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) AI software on Saturday, 14th February. However, the automaker is still offering it with the purchase of a new Model S, Model X, or the top-end Cybertruck, aka the Cyberbeast.
Last year in August, Tesla bundled some premium features and FSD for Model S and X. The automaker called this bundle the ‘Luxe Package’.
However, the Luxe Package wasn’t optional, and the prices of each variant of the Model S premium EV sedan and Model X luxury electric SUV were raised by $10,000. The price of FSD at the time was $8,000 alone (also the last price before discontinuation).
During the Q4 and full year 2025 Earnings Call, Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced that the company will discontinue the production of the Model S and Model luxury segment EVs in the 2nd quarter of 2026.

So, if you plan to buy a Model S or X, you only have a few months left. The exciting part is that you get Full Self-Driving (FSD) at no extra cost.
The price of the standard Cybertruck All-Wheel Drive variant does not include FSD. Tesla is offering it included in the price of the Tri-Motor Cyberbeast version.
The current prices of Model S, Model X, and Cyberbeast that include FSD are:
- Tesla Model S AWD: $94,990
- Tesla Model S Plaid: $$109,990
- Tesla Model X AWD: $99,990
- Tesla Model X Plaid: $114,990
- Cybertruck Cyberbeast: $114,990
The downside of FSD is that it’s tied to a vehicle, instead of the owner’s Tesla Account. Normally, if you sell a Tesla vehicle that has FSD enabled, the AI self-driving software also goes to the new owner along with it.
To tackle this problem, Tesla offers FSD Transfers from time to time. As the automaker has moved to a subscription-only pricing model for the most part, the company has decided to end free FSD transfers soon.
If Tesla decides to get rid of the FSD Transfers Program forever, you’ll have to let go of the FSD software along with the Model S, X, or Cyberbeast when you sell the vehicle in the future.
However, Tesla has confirmed that it will consider FSD as a pricing factor when trading in older Teslas that have FSD installed for the life of the vehicle.
According to Tesla, as of this date, Tesla FSD has driven a total of 7.7 billion miles autonomously. Out of these 7.7 billion miles, more than 2.8 billion miles are driven on city streets (mostly in the US & Canada).
In an email to customers last week, Tesla defined its Full Self-Driving AI vision as:
When you engage FSD (Supervised), your vehicle uses its external cameras to capture a 360-degree view of the world around you, so your blind spots are covered and surrounding traffic is monitored.
FSD (Supervised) improves road safety by over 80% with passive and active safety features that help avoid over 1.9 million potential injuries every year—so you, and nearby drivers and pedestrians, stay safer on the road.
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Related Tesla FSD News
- Outright purchase of Tesla FSD is still available for the Model S and X (Luxe Package), and the Cyberbeast
- Tesla update 2026.2.3: hidden features, Service Mode FSD updates, battery recalibration, more
- Lemonade offers 50% insurance discount for Tesla owners using the safer Full Self-Driving (FSD)
- Watch Tesla FSD give way to an ambulance before the human driver could even hear it
- Tesla expands the rollout of FSD v14.2.2.4 (2025.45.9), release notes and first impression videos
- Tesla replaces standard Autopilot with TACC, Musk explains why







