Tesla FSD Just Drove 10,000 Miles Without Human Help

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving progress just got another real-world data point, and this one is hard to ignore. A Tesla owner has now crossed 10,000 consecutive miles using Full Self-Driving (Supervised) without a single intervention, doubling a milestone he achieved just weeks ago.
Tesla owner David Moss (@DavidMoss) today shared that his 2025 Model 3 Premium (formerly Long Range) RWD surpassed 10,000 miles of what he described as “non rounded up actual true 100% intervention free” driving using FSD 14.2. According to Moss, the achievement spans more than a month of daily use across 24 U.S. states, with the car handling everything from highway driving to city streets, parking maneuvers, and Supercharger stops entirely on its own.
What makes the milestone especially notable is the transparency behind it. Moss pointed to telemetry data verified through the third-party Whole Mars FSD Database leaderboard, which pulls directly from Tesla’s vehicle data. This information is now surfaced through Tesla’s Self-Driving Stats panel, a feature that arrived with FSD 14.2 and tracks how many real-world miles drivers actually allow FSD to handle.
This isn’t Moss’ first headline-making drive. Earlier this month, the same Model 3 reached 5,000 miles on FSD without any interventions, already putting it well ahead of other documented cases. For context, a Tesla Cybertruck owner recently shared proof of a 1,200-mile intervention-free FSD drive, which at the time was considered remarkable.
Moss’ 10,000-mile run also lands as Tesla continues to push autonomy further. The company recently began testing “unsupervised” FSD on Robotaxi vehicles in Austin, running without drivers, safety monitors, or passengers onboard. Elon Musk has said Tesla has “pretty much solved” autonomy, and long, uninterrupted real-world drives like this help reinforce that narrative.
While Full Self-Driving remains a supervised system for consumer vehicles, achievements like this show just how far Tesla’s software has come in a relatively short time. Whether this level of performance becomes common across the fleet remains to be seen, but for now, 10,000 miles without a single intervention is a milestone that stands out.
Moss is currently on track to be the first person to complete a coast-to-coast drive entirely on FSD, without a single intervention. You can stay up to date with his quest on X and by tracking his FSD mileage on the Whole Mars FSD Database.