For over a decade, Tesla has marketed its vehicles with bold promises of full self-driving capability, claiming every car it produced contained the necessary hardware. The accompanying software, however, never fully materialized — and a growing number of owners are now seeking legal recourse to recover the money they paid for features that were never delivered.
The Court Ruling Against Tesla
Tesla Delayed Payment for Months
The case raises broader questions about accountability in the electric vehicle industry. Automakers increasingly sell software-based features on a promise of future delivery, but cases like this demonstrate that consumers have legal tools available when those promises are not kept. In the EU, consumer protection regulations — including the Sale of Goods Directive — may offer even stronger grounds for similar claims.
Tesla's FSD package is still available as a subscription or one-time purchase. The Gawiser case is a reminder that marketing claims about autonomous driving technology carry real legal weight, and that owners who feel misled do have options.
Source: This Tesla owner won $10k in court for Tesla’s FSD lies (Updated) - Electrek· Based on source, with AI-assisted rewriting.
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