Tesla’s FSD Supervised is piling up miles in Europe fast: the company says owners in the Netherlands and Lithuania have now logged 20 million km with the system active. That is up from about 15 million km reported just about two days earlier, which makes for a remarkably brisk 5 million km jump and suggests adoption is moving faster than the usual cautious rollout story.

The headline number is less about bragging rights and more about momentum. Tesla has been nudging its supervised autonomy feature into more European hands, and the latest tally shows that once drivers try it, many seem to keep using it. In a region where regulators tend to move carefully on driver-assist tech, that kind of usage curve is the kind automakers like – and rivals study.

20 million km in the Netherlands and Lithuania

According to Tesla’s regional account for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, the combined mileage in the Netherlands and Lithuania has reached the 20 million km mark. The system had been sitting at roughly 15 million km before that, so the recent increase works out to around 5 million km in about two days. That’s a lot of supervised driving for a feature that is still being rolled out market by market.

There is a small but important subtext here: Tesla is not just adding a feature, it is building a usage habit. Competitors have spent years pitching driver assistance as a safety layer, but Tesla’s aggressive telemetry-driven rollout makes the adoption curve visible in public, which is great for hype and probably mildly irritating for everyone else.

Lithuania gets FSD Supervised next

Tesla previously said FSD Supervised was gradually becoming available to owners in Lithuania, extending the feature beyond its earlier European pockets. The company says the technology is intended to improve road safety and support a staged introduction of autonomous capabilities on European roads.

That staged approach matters because Europe has generally been more conservative than the US on hands-free and autonomy-adjacent systems. Tesla’s move looks like a classic Musk-era bet: push usage first, let the data speak later, and trust that every extra kilometer makes the argument a little harder to ignore.

What the usage spike suggests

  • 20 million km is the combined FSD Supervised mileage Tesla says it has reached in the Netherlands and Lithuania.
  • The figure was previously about 15 million km, implying roughly 5 million km added in about two days.
  • Tesla says the feature is being rolled out gradually in Lithuania and is aimed at safer, more automated driving.

The open question is whether this pace holds once the novelty fades and regulators take a harder look. For now, though, Tesla has a useful answer for skeptics: at least in these early European markets, drivers are clearly trying FSD Supervised in large numbers – and not giving it up after the first spin.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *