Waymo, the self-driving vehicle division of Alphabet Inc., has started offering fully autonomous ride-hailing to members of the public in Nashville, the company announced. The initial service area spans roughly 60 square miles and includes neighborhoods and districts such as downtown Broadway, 12 South, Midtown, and East Nashville. The company is also conducting tests at Nashville International Airport with an eye toward extending service there in the future.
Access to the service is being rolled out through the Waymo mobile application. Riders are invited on a rolling basis, rather than through an immediate open enrollment, which means availability will expand gradually as invitations are issued.
Waymo also said it will begin allowing customers to request rides through the Lyft app later in 2026. Under that arrangement, Lyft will serve as the fleet management partner in Nashville via Flexdrive, a partnership structure the company identified as part of its local operating plan.
In announcing the launch, Tekedra Mawakana, co-CEO of Waymo, framed the service as a way to connect Nashville's entertainment, tourism, and nightlife hubs. The company said it aims to provide a dependable transit option for both residents and visitors as the city grows.
Tennessee Governor Bill Lee commented on the deployment, saying the state is pursuing innovative private-sector transportation solutions. He noted that technologies like Waymo's fully autonomous vehicles expand mobility options in ways the state could not deliver alone and help accelerate economic activity.
Waymo provided safety data to contextualize the rollout. Drawing from more than 170 million miles of travel logged by its systems, the company reported a 13-fold reduction in crashes involving serious injury or worse when compared with human drivers. Waymo said it observed the same 13-fold reduction in crashes that involved injuries to pedestrians.
The initial Nashville launch combines targeted geographic coverage, invitation-based rider access, and a planned channel through Lyft later in 2026. Testing at the city's airport remains underway and is described as preparatory for future expansion of the autonomous service to that location.
Context and product implications
For users, the offering represents a new on-demand mobility option in a concentrated urban area. For the companies involved, the arrangement highlights a dual distribution approach: direct access via Waymo's app and broader reach through a third-party ride-hailing platform with a fleet management role handled by Lyft via Flexdrive.