Waymo, Alphabet Inc.'s autonomous-vehicle division, has created a German legal entity as it prepares to expand its robotaxi operations outside the U.S. The company submitted formation paperwork last month for Waymo Germany GmbH, which was formally registered on June 15, according to the company registration filing.
The registration states that the entity will provide ride-hailing using autonomous vehicles and will also supply support services to third parties running comparable commercial autonomous-vehicle services. The filing lists Google's Munich office as the business address for the new unit. The company has not provided a timeline for beginning commercial operations in Germany.
Germany is already a testing ground for several international robotaxi developers. The country hosts trials by the U.K. startup Wayve Technologies Ltd. as well as Chinese firms including Baidu Inc. (NASDAQ:BIDU) and Beijing Momenta Technology Co. In addition, recent industry activity includes a partnership announced earlier this month between Uber Technologies Inc. (NYSE:UBER) and Tel Aviv-based Autobrains Technologies Ltd. to bring robotaxi services to Munich.
Waymo's standard approach to entering new markets typically starts with a limited fleet of human-supervised vehicles deployed to map local streets and refine its self-driving systems. That preparatory phase can span months or even years, though the company has reached operational launches more quickly in some U.S. markets where regulatory frameworks permitted faster rollouts. Prior to public service launches, Waymo commonly offers rides to employees as part of its internal testing and familiarization process.
The registration of Waymo Germany GmbH constitutes a formal step toward European expansion, but it does not provide details on operational milestones, launch dates, or regulatory approvals. Observers will need to wait for further announcements to know when or how the company intends to convert the registration into commercial robotaxi service in Germany.