
Waymo is preparing to begin fully autonomous operations with its 6th-generation Waymo Driver, marking a major milestone in the company’s push to expand robotaxi services across the United States.
The new system introduces a streamlined hardware configuration designed to reduce costs while maintaining the company’s safety-first approach. Built for long-term scalability across multiple vehicle platforms, the 6th-generation Driver is engineered to operate in more diverse environments — including regions with extreme winter weather — enabling broader deployment across U.S. cities.
Built on 200 Million Autonomous Miles
The 6th-generation Waymo Driver builds on nearly 200 million fully autonomous miles driven across dense urban centers and freeways in more than 10 major U.S. cities. That real-world experience has shaped a system designed to handle the complex “long tail” scenarios that emerge when operating at scale.
Waymo’s approach centers on a custom, multi-modal sensing suite that integrates high-resolution cameras, advanced imaging radar, lidar, and external audio receivers. This sensor fusion strategy ensures the system does not rely on a single perception method — a key factor in maintaining consistent performance across varied road and weather conditions.
Next-Generation Vision System
At the core of the 6th-generation platform is a new 17-megapixel automotive imager — a significant leap forward in camera resolution and dynamic range.
The upgraded cameras:
- Capture sharper, more detailed images
- Perform effectively in low-light conditions
- Handle glare from headlights and emergency vehicles
- Maintain strong performance across extreme automotive temperatures
Despite the higher resolution, Waymo has reduced the total number of cameras required — using less than half the number deployed in its previous-generation system — improving efficiency and lowering overall hardware costs.
To maintain visibility in rain, snow, and road spray, the system features integrated cleaning mechanisms. If camera visibility is compromised, lidar and radar provide redundancy to preserve full environmental awareness.
Advanced Lidar for All-Weather Performance
Lidar remains a core component of Waymo’s perception stack. Unlike cameras, lidar actively emits laser pulses to generate a detailed 3D “point cloud” map of the surrounding environment.
The 6th-generation lidar system benefits from significant industry-wide cost reductions over the past five years. Waymo combines these efficiencies with custom-designed chips and optical systems — with core components engineered and built in California.
Enhancements include:
- Greater detection range
- Improved fidelity in complex scenes
- Better performance through rain, snow, and heavy road spray
- Reduced distortion near reflective road signs
Strategically positioned short-range lidars add centimeter-level precision — critical for navigating dense urban traffic, cyclists, pedestrians, and situations such as opening car doors.
Imaging Radar With Enhanced Sensor Fusion
The new imaging radar system delivers dense, real-time maps of object distance, velocity, and size — functioning reliably in all lighting and weather conditions.
Built on the foundation of the 5th-generation system, the updated radar incorporates improved in-house algorithms optimized for rain and snow. Lightweight machine-learning models dynamically optimize performance across the entire sensor suite, maximizing the effectiveness of sensor fusion.
External Audio Detection for Emergency Awareness
Waymo’s Driver also integrates External Audio Receivers (EARs) to detect and localize critical sounds such as sirens and railroad crossings.
Positioned around the central perception dome, the EAR system can often identify the direction of an approaching emergency vehicle before it becomes visible — adding another layer of redundancy to the platform’s safety architecture.
Designed for Multiple Vehicle Platforms
Rather than building its own vehicle, Waymo focuses on developing a flexible autonomous driving system adaptable to multiple platforms.
The 6th-generation Driver is engineered to integrate with vehicles such as the Hyundai IONIQ 5, as well as future platforms including the Ojai robotaxi. By collaborating closely with OEM partners, Waymo ensures base vehicles are “Driver-ready” from the factory.
Production scaling is already underway at Waymo’s autonomous vehicle facility in Metro Phoenix, targeting capacity for tens of thousands of units per year. This shift toward high-volume production aims to unlock greater economies of scale as robotaxi services expand across the U.S.
[source: Waymo]




