Tesla has officially announced the latest rollout plan for FSD Supervised today. The coverage includes 10 countries and regions: the United States, Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, China, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, the Netherlands, and Lithuania. This means that the long-awaited FSD for Chinese car enthusiasts is about to officially enter the Chinese market. Tesla officially announces that FSD Supervised is entering the Chinese market. In fact, this official entry of FSD into China is not entirely unexpected. Just last week, Tesla’s CEO visited China as part of the U.S. delegation led by the Trump team. During his visit, he posted on social media that he felt “good” about the meeting between the two leaders, believing that cooperation between the two countries would yield better results. Against this backdrop, the progress of Tesla’s FSD entry into China once again became a key focus of industry attention. Shortly thereafter, Tesla China posted multiple job openings on its official website related to autonomous driving testing, covering nine cities: Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Suzhou, Wuhan, Chengdu, Tianjin, and Chongqing. Among them, positions for autonomous driving testing accounted for over 70%, and all openings were marked with an “urgent” label. Notably, the job requirements explicitly include “tracking changes in China’s certification and regulatory frameworks,” and the functions involved — such as AEB (Automatic Emergency Braking) and FCW (Forward Collision Warning) — are core components of China’s mandatory active safety standards. This series of moves has sparked industry speculation about Tesla accelerating the rollout of FSD in the Chinese market. Tesla FSD has been activated. Looking further back at the journey of Tesla FSD entering China, the timeline from a “half-baked” version to a “full-blooded” one has been quite lengthy. As early as 2019, Chinese car enthusiasts could pre-order the FSD option package at a price of 64k RMB(~$ 9410). During this period, Elon Musk made many optimistic statements, while regulators remained cautious about data compliance and safety issues. Then, in February 2025, Tesla pushed an OTA update called “City Streets Autopilot” to Chinese users, marking a substantive step forward. However, many users found during their experience that this version, restricted by data compliance, relied heavily on public video data for training scenarios and struggled with certain road conditions unique to China, leading netizens to dub it the “weakened version” of FSD. The turning point came in February 2026, when Tesla’s China AI Training Center officially began operations in Shanghai’s Lingang area, establishing a closed-loop data system covering “data collection — local storage — local training — in-vehicle deployment — continuous iteration.” Tesla Vice President Grace Tao described it as a necessary path for localization, achieving a fully compliant data security system. Tesla Cybercab Currently, Tesla has officially launched FSD Supervised for car enthusiasts in the Netherlands and Lithuania, with a subscription fee of $99 per month. The rollout timelines for other countries and regions have not yet been announced. It is worth mentioning that Tesla’s Chief Financial Officer stated during the first-quarter earnings conference call that the company is in close communication with Chinese regulators, striving to obtain full approval for FSD in China by the third quarter of 2026.