Tesla’s FSD Just Went Live in Its 7th Country

Tesla has officially launched Full Self-Driving (Supervised) in South Korea, marking the seventh country where the advanced driver-assistance system is allowed to operate. The rollout was first spotted by X user @Tslachan, who reported that Tesla has begun pushing FSD 14.1.4 to select Model S and Model X vehicles equipped with Hardware 4 through software update 2025.32.8.20. A wider release is expected to follow.

Until now, FSD (Supervised) had only been available in six countries: the U.S. (including Puerto Rico), Canada, China, Mexico, and, most recently, Australia and New Zealand. Tesla teased a South Korean launch last week after sharing a short clip of FSD navigating city streets in Seoul, and it now looks like the rollout is officially underway.

According to @Tslachan — who also previously shared a video of their first real-world drive using FSD (Supervised) in Korea — the system performs impressively. They noted that the only moment requiring intervention was inside a parking lot, adding that the rest of the drive was smooth and consistent.

While South Korean owners are receiving FSD version 14.1.4, Tesla began its standard slow-roll deployment of FSD 14.2 earlier this week. That update appears to contain far more under-the-hood improvements than its modest release notes let on, with the company positioning FSD 14 as its most refined iteration yet.

South Korea’s approval comes as Tesla works to expand FSD access globally. In Europe, Tesla is currently asking customers to contact Dutch regulators to help push for regulatory approval. The company says it has already logged more than one million kilometers of internal FSD testing across 17 EU countries, and Elon Musk said earlier this month that the first regulatory green light in the EU should arrive in early 2026.

For now, South Korea is the newest market to unlock Tesla’s supervised autonomy features — but likely not for long as the company continues its rapid FSD expansion worldwide.