Tesla Adds Real-Time FSD Miles Counter With Big Safety Claims

Tesla has launched a new Full Self-Driving (Supervised) safety page with a live counter showing how many miles owners have driven using the system — and the numbers already point to massive scale. At the time of writing, the counter displays more than 6.4 billion miles driven with FSD (Supervised) enabled across all road types.

“FSD (Supervised) enables your vehicle to drive you almost anywhere with your active supervision, requiring minimal intervention,” says Tesla. “When engaged and under your active supervision, your likelihood of being in a collision goes down.”

The new page highlights detailed collision statistics and breaks them down across major, minor, and off-highway incidents. According to Tesla, vehicles using FSD (Supervised) experience 7x fewer major collisions, 7x fewer minor collisions, and 5x fewer off-highway collisions compared to vehicles driven manually.

Tesla shared additional data showing how FSD (Supervised) compares to manual driving across millions — and in some cases billions — of miles. In North America, Teslas using FSD (Supervised) recorded 715 major collisions across more than 3.6 billion miles. That translates to 5,109,476 miles per major collision, far above vehicles driven manually with or without Active Safety features, and well beyond the U.S. national average of 698,781 miles per major collision.

“With FSD Supervised engaged, you’re 7x less likely to be involved in an accident,” Tesla said in a post on X highlighting the new FSD safety dashboard. The company added that FSD “improves US road safety by over 80%, saving lives and preventing injuries,” noting that its fleet trains on “>100 years of data” and collectively experiences “a lifetime of driving scenarios every 10 minutes.”

The new site arrives as Tesla ramps up efforts to accelerate FSD adoption globally. The company recently began rolling out FSD 14, its latest and most advanced version yet, and the more people use it, the more real-world data Tesla can capture to improve the system. FSD (Supervised) expanded to Australia and New Zealand earlier this fall, and Tesla has begun teasing a launch in South Korea. Europe remains a major holdout, but CEO Elon Musk said during the company’s annual shareholder meeting this month that the first EU approval is expected in early 2026.

Tesla also provides a full methodology section on the site explaining exactly how each metric is calculated. Click here to check it out yourself and track Tesla’s progress as the company works to scale FSD worldwide.