Tesla has started rolling out FSD v14 “Lite” to its Hardware 3 (HW3) cars, the company’s AI chief Ashok Elluswamy confirmed today. The build, firmware version 2026.20.5.1, is going out first to early-access drivers.
It’s the first major Full Self-Driving update for the roughly 4 million HW3 vehicles that had been frozen on FSD v12.6 since early 2025 — but it remains a supervised, hands-on Level 2 system.
What’s in FSD v14 ‘Lite’ #
Elluswamy announced the rollout on X, framing it as a way to bring the newer software stack to Tesla’s older computer.
“FSD v14 Lite is now rolling out to AI3 early-access customers,” he wrote, using Tesla’s internal name for HW3. “This build distills the driving behavior from AI4’s v14 series into both the camera and compute config of AI3. It includes destination options and speed profiles on city roads, but more importantly significantly improved safety.”
According to Tesla’s release notes, the “Lite” build “distilled the intelligence from HW4 V14 into HW3,” letting the older computer “directly learn how to handle scenarios using HW4 V14 as a guide.” Tesla says that unlocks improvements made on HW4, including reinforcement learning and offline models, along with better navigation handling, merges and forks, pedestrian interactions, and newly introduced parking, unparking, and reversing capabilities.
The rollout is currently limited to Tesla’s Early Access Group of high-Safety-Score drivers and influencers, with a wider release “over the next few weeks,” per Elluswamy. FSD v14 has already launched in Europe and Australia, so HW3 owners in those markets are expected to follow.
Why HW3 owners were waiting #
The update closes a gap that has been a year in the making. Tesla sold millions of cars from 2019 onward with the promise that every vehicle had “all the hardware needed for full self-driving,” collecting up to $15,000 from customers who bought the FSD package.
That promise broke on Tesla’s Q1 2026 earnings call, when Elon Musk admitted that HW3 cars “simply do not have the capability” to run unsupervised FSD. The chip has roughly one-eighth the memory bandwidth of HW4. Tesla has since floated building dedicated micro-factories just to retrofit HW3 computers and cameras, and it retroactively inserted the word “supervised” into FSD contracts that owners signed years ago.
The v14 “Lite” build was Musk’s consolation prize, first promised for HW3 internationally back in April to defuse growing tensions. It’s now shipping at the very end of the June target window.
Still not unsupervised #
The critical caveat is in the name of the release itself: “FSD (Supervised) v14 Lite.” It is a Level 2 driver-assistance system that requires the driver to pay attention and keep their hands ready at all times. It does not turn an HW3 car into an unsupervised self-driving vehicle.
That distinction matters because the unsupervised capability is exactly what Tesla sold and what HW3 owners paid for. Better lane centering and the ability to park itself is real progress, but it is not the product.
The pressure isn’t easing, either. The Dutch collective claim over Tesla’s broken HW3 promises has grown to 7,000 owners with law firm Kennedy Van der Laan backing formal legal action, and Tesla still faces the prospect of having to replace the computer in ~4 million cars or compensate their owners.
Electrek’s Take #
We appreciate the progress here. Squeezing the v14 stack down onto a frozen, seven-year-old computer is a genuine achievement, and the safety and comfort improvements are real wins for HW3 owners who have been stuck on v12.6 for over a year.
But let’s be clear: this is not what HW3 owners need. What they need is a clear path to being compensated for Tesla failing to deliver what it sold them — unsupervised self-driving. A “Lite” version of something that was never the promise doesn’t change that.
v14 Lite is still a Level 2 system that requires constant driver attention. It is not, and on this hardware it cannot become, the unsupervised autonomy that buyers paid up to $15,000 for. Distilling HW4’s behavior into HW3 is a clever way to improve the driving experience, but it’s also a clever way to move the goalpost — to make the situation feel resolved without actually resolving the core breach: roughly 4 million cars that were sold as self-driving-capable and aren’t.
Until Tesla puts a real number on the table — a free hardware retrofit or a refund of the FSD package — every new “Lite” build is a feature update, not a fix. So the question for Tesla stands: when do HW3 owners get made whole?
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