Aurora’s autonomous trucks can now travel non-stop on a 1,000-mile route between Fort Worth and Phoenix — surpassing what a human driver can legally accomplish.
The distance and time it takes to travel it offers positive financial implications for Aurora — and any other company hoping to commercialize autonomous pickups.
Aurora takes about 15 hours to transport cargo with driverless trucks on the 1,000-mile journey, according to the company. Truck drivers take much longer to complete the same distance because of federal regulations that limit the amount of time they can be behind the wheel. For example, truck drivers must stop for a 30-minute break after eight hours and can operate a semi-truck for up to 11 hours at a time, according to federal regulations. Once drivers reach that threshold, they can’t get behind the wheel for another 10 hours.
“This represents more than just a technological achievement,” Aurora co-founder and CEO Chris Urmson said during the company’s earnings conference call Wednesday afternoon. “It’s the dawn of a superhuman future for freight.”
It also offers compelling financials to its clients, including Uber Freight, Werner, FedEx and Schneider. The company said it eventually can cut transit times nearly in half, a statistic that has won over companies like Hirschbach, an early customer on the Fort Worth to Phoenix route.
Aurora said to one letter to shareholders that it is poised to expand throughout the Sun Belt of the United States. Today, the company operates driverless trucks — some with a human observer still in the cab — on routes between Dallas and Houston, Fort Worth and El Paso, El Paso and Phoenix, Fort Worth and Phoenix, and Laredo and Dallas.
The expansion helped Aurora transition from a maker of autonomous trucks to a commercial operator making money on driverless routes.
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Aurora has brought in revenue since April 2025, when it first deployed driverless heavy-duty trucks for commercial use on public roads. Aurora reported $1 million in the fourth quarter and $3 million for the year, according to a report filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The company’s chief financial officer, David Maday, said total adjusted revenue for the year, which includes money earned through pilot programs early last year, was $4 million.
This is a small amount, especially compared to his expenses. Aurora reported a net loss of $816 million in 2025, up 9% from a year earlier, as it focuses on scaling its operations. However, it shows measurable progress since 2024, when it recognized no revenue.
Revenue is expected to continue as the company adds more driverless trucks and routes to its network. Today, the company has 30 trucks in its fleet, of which 10 operate without a driver. This fleet is expected to grow to more than 200 trucks by the end of the year. Urmson said the company’s trucks have accumulated 250,000 driverless miles since January 2026 with a perfect safety record.
In the second quarter, Aurora plans to deploy a fleet of driverless International Motors LT trucks that will not have a human observer. Aurora’s driverless operations using Paccar trucks currently have a human safety observer in the cab as requested by the truck manufacturer.
Urmson had a bullish view of Aurora’s future, bolstered by developments in self-driving software, an upcoming second-generation hardware kit that will lower costs and expand driverless routes. The expansion of driverless trucking routes has been spurred by a new software release, the fourth since the commercial service began in April 2025.
The first version validated initial driverless operations between Dallas and Houston, the second validated overnight operations and the third validated El Paso, according to Aurora. The company said this latest software release will give the self-driving system the ability to navigate the diverse geography and climate of the southern United States.
“Just as the past two years have brought robotaxis into the mainstream, we expect 2026 to mark the tipping point where the market recognizes that autonomous trucks have arrived and are quickly becoming a permanent fixture in our transportation landscape,” Urmson said on the company’s earnings call. “If you’re in the Sun Belt in 2026, you won’t just be reading about the Aurora Guide. You’ll be seeing it every day.”
Aurora currently operates driverless routes through Texas, New Mexico and Arizona and has future driverless operations planned in Nevada, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, the company said.
