Tesla has launched an artificial intelligence training center in China, a critical development for the automaker’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) ambitions in the world’s largest electric vehicle market.
China’s AI training center now operational
Tesla Vice President Grace Tao confirmed on Friday that the company has put an AI training center into operation in China, focusing on developing local assisted driving and AI capabilities.
Speaking to Shanghai-based financial news outlet Cailian, Tao said the center has “sufficient computing power to support development of assisted-driving features,” though she did not disclose details such as the center’s location, investment size, or specific computational capacity.
The announcement marks a significant milestone for Tesla’s FSD rollout in China. Due to the country’s strict data localization laws, Tesla has been prohibited from transferring driving data collected on Chinese roads to its US-based training infrastructure. This has been a major handicap for the company’s neural network-based self-driving system, which learns from real-world driving scenarios.
Why local training matters
Tesla’s FSD relies on a neural network trained using video clips from real driving situations, enabling vehicles to make human-like decisions. The system has been trained on billions of miles of data from Tesla vehicles in the US and other markets.
However, in China, Tesla hasn’t been able to leverage this approach. When Tesla initially launched FSD in China in February 2025, CEO Elon Musk acknowledged the company “just used publicly available video on the Internet of roads and signs in China and used that to train in simulation.”
This workaround was far from ideal. Chinese roads present unique challenges, from different traffic patterns and signage to specific driving behaviors, that require localized training data to handle effectively.
With a local AI training center, Tesla can now:
- Train its neural network on actual Chinese driving data collected from local Tesla vehicles
- Iterate and improve the system specifically for Chinese road conditions
- Comply with data localization requirements while still advancing FSD capabilities
Competition heating up
The timing is significant. Chinese EV makers are racing ahead with Level 3 (L3) autonomous driving capabilities, with thousands of L3-capable vehicles expected to hit Chinese roads in 2026 following recent regulatory approvals.
Companies like Huawei, Xpeng, and Li Auto have been aggressively developing their own autonomous driving systems, trained entirely on local Chinese data. Tesla’s lack of local training infrastructure had put it at a disadvantage.
“Chinese fans of autonomous driving will benefit from intensified competition between Tesla and its local rivals,” said Yin Ran, an angel investor in Shanghai, to the South China Morning Post. “As thousands of L3 cars are likely to hit China’s roads in 2026, a new battle will take shape as all electric-car builders try to deliver efficient and affordable self-driving systems.”
FSD approval timeline still unclear
Despite the progress, there’s no clear timeline for full FSD approval in China. Last month, Musk told the World Economic Forum in Davos he expected FSD to gain approval in China by February, a claim that was quickly disputed by Chinese government sources.
Tao said Tesla would “actively engage in assisted driving initiatives in China” but could not provide a specific deployment timeline.
Currently, Tesla offers “Intelligent Assisted Driving” in China, a renamed version of its FSD system that has gone through several branding changes since its February 2025 introduction. The feature has been available for purchase at RMB 64,000 ($9,220), though notably, starting February 14, Tesla will discontinue the one-time payment option globally, transitioning entirely to a monthly subscription model.
Electrek’s Take
This is a bigger deal than it might seem on the surface. Tesla’s data advantage has always been one of its key moats in autonomous driving, it has more real-world driving data than arguably any other company. But in China, that advantage was effectively nullified by data localization laws.
It was still leading over other companies thanks to being years ahead in tech through deployment in North America, but Chinese companies have been closing the gap quickly.
Now, Tesla can actually start building the same kind of training flywheel in China that it has in the US: more cars → more data → better FSD → more cars. It’s taken nearly a year since the initial FSD launch in China to get this infrastructure in place.
The question is whether Tesla has lost too much ground to local competitors who have been training on Chinese data all along. Companies like Huawei and Xpeng have systems that are performing very well on Chinese roads, and they’ve had a head start on local training.
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