Tesla has quietly removed Basic Autopilot from its online configurator in the Netherlands. New orders now only offer Full Self-Driving (Supervised) — no free driver-assistance tier at all. The change makes the Netherlands the first European market where Tesla has stripped Basic Autopilot from the buying experience, mirroring the controversial move it made in North America back in January. What changed in the Netherlands We verified the change directly on Tesla’s Dutch configurator. When configuring a new Model 3 or Model Y, the only driver-assistance option available is FSD (Supervised), offered as a €99/month subscription, a €7,500 one-time purchase, or “Add later.” There is no Basic Autopilot option — not as a standard inclusion, not as an add-on. It’s simply gone. Advertisement - scroll for more content Meanwhile, other European markets still include Basic Autopilot at no extra cost. On Tesla’s German configurator, for example, Basic Autopilot is listed as “Inklusive” and Enhanced Autopilot is available for €3,800. The same is true for France and other EU countries. The one-time FSD purchase option in the Netherlands has a deadline of May 15, 2026 — just three days from now. After that, Dutch buyers who want any form of autonomous driving assistance beyond basic cruise control will need to subscribe at €99/month. Why the Netherlands first The timing is not coincidental. The Netherlands became the first European country to approve Tesla’s FSD Supervised last month when the Dutch RDW granted type approval under UN R-171. Tesla has been rolling out FSD to Dutch owners since mid-April. With FSD now live and approved in the Netherlands, Tesla appears to be using the market as a testing ground for its subscription-first strategy in Europe. The playbook is identical to what happened in North America: remove the free tier, create a gap in functionality, and funnel buyers toward a monthly FSD subscription. In January, Tesla cut standard Autopilot from new North American orders and paywalled Autosteer behind the FSD subscription. New Teslas in the US now ship with only Traffic-Aware Cruise Control — no lane-keeping at all unless you pay. The rest of Europe is likely next. Tesla has set a May 21 deadline for one-time FSD purchases across other European markets, suggesting a broader transition to the subscription model is imminent. As FSD approvals expand — Flanders is already moving toward recognition — expect Basic Autopilot to disappear from more European configurators. The competitive problem The removal is especially awkward in the EU, where GSR2 regulations have required all new cars to include emergency lane-keeping systems since July 2024. Most competitors go further — Toyota, Hyundai, and Volkswagen all include active lane-centering as standard on models priced well below a Model 3. Tesla now charges €99/month for equivalent functionality. A base Model 3 in the Netherlands starts at €36,990. For that price, Dutch buyers now get only the GSR2-mandated emergency lane-keeping — a basic safety nudge — but no active lane-centering or Autosteer unless they subscribe to FSD. A Volkswagen ID.4 or Hyundai Ioniq 5 at a similar price includes those features standard. Electrek’s Take This is clearly Tesla testing its FSD-subscription-first approach in Europe, starting where it has regulatory approval. The strategy makes financial sense for Tesla — as it is much easier to make a $100 a month more appealing by moving standard features into the paid subscription rather than actually delivering on the monthly subscription namesake: actual self-driving. The Netherlands is a small market, so the backlash will be contained, but this is a preview of what’s coming to Germany, France, and the rest of Europe if FSD approvals roll out over the summer. Tesla is betting that FSD is compelling enough to justify stripping away the free tier entirely. We’re skeptical. In North America, the removal of standard Autopilot generated significant backlash and gave competitors an easy talking point. In Europe, where buyers already have strong alternatives from Volkswagen, BMW, and Hyundai — all with standard driver assistance — the pressure will be even greater. The May 15 deadline for one-time FSD purchases in the Netherlands adds urgency, but it also signals that Tesla is moving aggressively toward a subscription-only model. If you’re ordering a Tesla in the Netherlands and want FSD without a monthly bill, you have three days left. Stay up to date with the latest content by subscribing to Electrek on Google News. You’re reading Electrek— experts who break news about Tesla, electric vehicles, and green energy, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow Electrek on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our YouTube channel for the latest reviews.