You have to basically drive like a grandpa for a few months to even be eligible. They give you a driving score, and if you take all the fun out of driving a Tesla, then you might become eligible for FSD Beta.
I spent months trying, and never got my driving score to the point of qualifying for FSD Beta. I think you need to have of a score of 98 or 99 (and I was in the 70s).
[1] The Beta is free (or rather, only available) if you have regular FSD. Regular FSD costs $15,000.
Regular FSD, otoh, is really not that impressive. Especially in comparison to Enhanced Autopilot. The extra value add is minimal.
Enhanced Autopilot already has all the gimmicky features you might want to use to show off to people (like Smart Summon, Autopark, etc), and it only costs $6,000.
Yes, you have to pay $15k just to apply to the beta program, and you still may not get accepted into the program.
The safety score check stuff is largely gone away today - anyone who pays 200 bucks can click the beta opt in and get it almost straight away now, there is ~zero risk of not getting the beta if you really want it, live in US or Canada, and are prepared to pay.
> https://www.tesla.com/support/full-self-driving-subscription...
That's a significant amount of cash for features that I would likely never use.
Sadly, it does shut itself off as soon as you're off a highway however. (That's where FSD would hypothetically come in, once the beta is ready, with "Autosteer on city streets").
In terms of value for money:
- I'd say Auto Lane Change is worth $1,500.
- Navigate on Autopilot is worth another $1,500.
- Autopark is worth $1,000.
- Smart Summon is worth $5,00
Overall, Enhanced Autopilot is worth at least $4,500 methinks.Throw in $1,500 as a profit margin (or Elon tax), so he can burn some dinosaurs for his private jet flights, the $6,000 Enhanced Autopilot price point makes sense.
FSD, otoh, is absolutely not worth it.
How often do you use this and how well does it work?
TL;DR: Controller drift class action lawsuit filed by parents thrown out, because their children were the actual "affected class". Refiled with the children as the class and thrown out again, this time because of an arbitration clause in the EULA their parents would have had to agree with.
Lawyers and EULAs are crazy.
There might be precedent to even removing the feature since FSD almost is vaporware and has no release date. https://www.cnet.com/tech/gaming/ps3-other-os-settlement-cla...