Waymo Raises Historic $16 Billion at $126 Billion Valuation

Alphabet’s Waymo raises $16 billion in largest autonomous vehicle funding ever, plans expansion to 20+ cities including Tokyo and London in 2026.

Credit: Lars Plougmann | Openverse

Waymo, Alphabet’s autonomous vehicle subsidiary, announced on February 2, 2026, that it has raised $16 billion in a funding round that values the company at $126 billion, representing the largest investment in autonomous vehicle history and nearly tripling its valuation from 16 months earlier. The capital will fuel aggressive expansion into more than 20 new cities in 2026, including the company’s first international markets in Tokyo and London.

The round was led by Dragoneer Investment Group, DST Global, and Sequoia Capital, with significant participation from Andreessen Horowitz, Mubadala Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners, Silver Lake, Tiger Global, T. Rowe Price, Fidelity Management & Research Company, and others. Alphabet, which incubated Waymo 17 years ago as a Google “moonshot” project, participated in the round and maintains its position as majority investor.

Waymo’s operational metrics demonstrate extraordinary growth trajectory. The company provided 15 million rides in 2025, more than tripling annual volume from the previous year and surpassing 20 million lifetime rides. Currently delivering over 400,000 weekly rides across six major US metropolitan areas—Phoenix, San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Austin, Atlanta, and Miami—Waymo has transitioned from proving concept to scaling commercial operations.

The company emphasizes its safety record as fundamental to investor confidence. Waymo claims its autonomous vehicles demonstrate statistically superior safety compared to human drivers, with 90% fewer serious crashes based on 127 million autonomous miles driven. This safety performance has been crucial for regulatory approvals and public acceptance as the technology scales.

The $16 billion funding will support several strategic initiatives. First, domestic US expansion includes planned launches in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Orlando, Detroit, Las Vegas, San Diego, Denver, Nashville, and Washington DC during 2026. Second, international expansion begins with Tokyo and London, marking Waymo’s first operations outside the United States and demonstrating the technology’s adaptability to different regulatory environments and driving conditions including right-hand drive markets.

The valuation represents dramatic appreciation from analyst estimates of approximately $30 billion just five years ago. This increase reflects both Waymo’s operational maturation and broader investor conviction in the autonomous vehicle market opportunity. Sequoia partner Konstantine Buhler noted that Waymo has “moved beyond research milestones to achieve operational excellence, tripling its weekly paid rides in just one year while maintaining customer delight.”

However, rapid expansion brings scrutiny. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and National Transportation Safety Board have opened multiple investigations into Waymo robotaxis, including incidents involving illegal passing of school buses and a collision with a child near a Santa Monica elementary school that caused minor injuries. In San Francisco, a Waymo vehicle killed a neighborhood cat, and numerous vehicles stalled during a power outage when navigating darkened intersections.

Competition intensifies as other well-funded players enter the robotaxi market. Tesla operates limited service in Austin using Full Self-Driving software, though CEO Elon Musk’s promises of widespread robotaxi networks by 2020 remain unfulfilled. Amazon-backed Zoox launched service in San Francisco. Waabi recently announced a $1 billion funding round and exclusive partnership with Uber to deploy 25,000 robotaxis. Chinese companies including WeRide and Baidu’s Apollo operate internationally.

Waymo’s $126 billion valuation exceeds many established automakers despite generating only an estimated $350 million in annual recurring revenue according to the Financial Times. This premium reflects investor belief that autonomous vehicle technology represents a trillion-dollar market opportunity as ride-hailing, logistics, and personal transportation transform over coming decades.

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