No, every Tesla has the hardware, but the driver-assist features you can turn on depend on what’s enabled on that car.
People use “Autopilot” as a catch-all for anything that helps with driving. Tesla uses it as a product name, and that’s where the confusion starts. A new Tesla in one country might arrive with lane centering. The same model elsewhere might ship with adaptive cruise control only, with steering assistance behind a paid package. Used Teslas add another twist: the car can have the cameras and computing, yet the software entitlement may or may not be attached to the vehicle you’re buying.
This article clears it up in plain terms. You’ll learn what Tesla puts in every car, what “Autopilot” typically includes, what Full Self-Driving (Supervised) adds, and how to confirm a specific VIN before you hand over money.
What Autopilot Is And What It Isn’t
Tesla’s driver-assist stack has three layers: (1) the hardware on the car, (2) the base functions available to that hardware, and (3) optional packages that add features. The word “Autopilot” sits in the middle layer, and its exact bundle has shifted by region and order date.
Hardware vs. software entitlements
All modern Teslas leave the factory with cameras and onboard computing that can run driver-assist features. That does not guarantee the same feature set is active. Think of the hardware as the stage and the entitlement as the ticket. The car can be built the same way, yet the menu shown on the screen can differ.
Driver responsibility stays with you
Autopilot is driver assistance, not autonomous driving. In practical terms it matches “Level 2” driver assistance: the system can help with steering and speed in limited ways, while you stay responsible for the driving task. NHTSA’s chart of automation levels makes that responsibility line clear. NHTSA’s levels of automation chart maps out what the driver still must do at each level.
Does Every Tesla Have Autopilot? The Only Answer That Holds Up
If you’re asking about a specific car, the only safe answer is: check what is enabled on that VIN today. Tesla has shipped the hardware broadly, yet what is included at delivery can change with country rules, pricing, and how Tesla labels packages at that moment.
If you want a quick gut-check before you even see the car: assume the cameras are there, assume steering assistance might not be, then verify in person. That mindset saves you from buying a car based on a dealer’s copy-and-paste description.
Three scenarios you’ll run into
- New purchase with steering assistance active: You’ll see options like lane centering and adaptive cruise control as part of what you paid for.
- New purchase with cruise control only: You still get driver assistance, yet steering help may require a paid add-on.
- Used purchase with mixed entitlements: The vehicle may already have a package tied to it, or it may be eligible for an upgrade you’d need to buy.
Why the wording keeps changing
Regulators have pushed Tesla to be more precise in marketing language. The California DMV has said Tesla violated state law by using “autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving Capability” in marketing that could mislead buyers. California DMV’s December 16, 2025 news release lays out the agency’s view and the corrective path it demanded.
What Tesla Includes In Every Car: The Baseline You Can Rely On
Even when package names shift, Tesla’s baseline is consistent: the car is built with the hardware for driver-assist features, and the vehicle software includes controls for cruise and lane-related features. The question is which of those controls are available.
Cameras and onboard computing
New Teslas are built with a camera suite and the computing to process it. Tesla describes that hardware set on its own product page for the system. Tesla’s Autopilot hardware requirements page lists the camera and processing setup Tesla uses as the base for its driver-assist features.
Adaptive cruise control as the “floor”
On most recent builds, adaptive cruise control is the feature you can usually count on seeing, even when steering assistance is not part of the included bundle. It manages speed and following distance. Drivers often feel it first on highways, then notice how it behaves in stop-and-go traffic.
Steering assistance is the pivot point
Lane centering is the feature that separates “nice cruise control” from what many people picture when they hear Autopilot. When it’s present, it can keep the car centered as cruise control manages speed. When it’s absent, you do all the steering while the car handles only speed and spacing.
| Situation | What to check first | What “yes” looks like |
|---|---|---|
| Buying new from Tesla | Order page line items + final invoice | Autopilot or FSD listed as included/selected |
| Buying used from Tesla | Tesla listing “Features” section | Package name shown on the listing for that VIN |
| Buying used from a dealer | In-car menu: Controls → Autopilot | Lane centering options appear and can be toggled |
| Private sale | Tesla app on seller’s account (screen share) | Upgrades/subscriptions page shows package status |
| Car has cameras but no steering option | Controls → Autopilot, then Software tab | Package name is missing or shown as available to buy |
| Trying FSD short-term | Check eligibility in the Tesla app | FSD shows as available as a monthly add-on |
| After purchase | Ownership transfer in the Tesla app | VIN appears under your account with entitlements intact |
| Unsure after an update | Release notes + Autopilot settings | Feature list matches the package shown on Software screen |
Full Self-Driving (Supervised): What It Adds And How People Pay For It
Full Self-Driving (Supervised), often shortened to FSD, is Tesla’s higher tier driver-assist package. It can handle more of the driving task under driver supervision, with prompts that can ask you to take over. Tesla describes the feature set and the supervision requirement on its product page. Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (Supervised) page lists the types of maneuvers it can perform under active supervision.
Why subscriptions change the “does it have it?” question
When a driver-assist package is a subscription, a used car can look like it “has” a feature during a test drive, then lose it when the prior owner cancels. That’s not a software bug. It’s a billing change. So, when you hear “it has FSD,” the next question is “paid upgrade or monthly add-on?”
How To Check A Tesla In Five Minutes
If you can sit in the driver’s seat, you can usually settle the whole question quickly. You’re hunting for two things: the package name and the feature toggles.
Step-by-step: where to look
- Open Controls on the touchscreen.
- Tap Software and read the section that lists installed packages.
- Tap Autopilot and look for lane centering, lane change, and warning settings.
- Open the Tesla app (owner account) and check the upgrades/subscriptions area for that VIN.
What a real “Autopilot included” screen looks like
When Autopilot is enabled, you’ll see a package name under the Software tab and you’ll see steering-related toggles in the Autopilot menu. If you only see cruise-control settings, treat the car as “cruise only” until proven otherwise.
Listing red flags that waste money
- “Autopilot” used as a generic word: Cameras do not equal an active package.
- No menu photos: If they can’t show the Autopilot and Software screens, you’re guessing.
- Vague claims like “self driving”: Ask for the exact package name shown on the vehicle.
Used Tesla Entitlements: What Buyers Mix Up
Used Teslas are where buyers get burned. You can buy a clean car and still end up with fewer driver-assist features than you expected. Most of the time it’s confusion, not a scam.
Vehicle upgrade vs. account billing
A paid upgrade that was purchased for that vehicle can stay tied to the VIN. A subscription can end when the prior owner cancels. Ask the seller to open the Tesla app and show the billing status. A simple screen share can save you hundreds.
Ownership transfer is part of the feature check
Plan to transfer ownership in the Tesla app right after purchase. Until the VIN sits under your account, you can’t be sure what you’ll be offered to buy, what will renew, and what is already installed.
Safety Reality Check: Where Driver-Assist Helps And Where It Trips Up
Driver-assist systems do a few tasks well: hold speed, keep distance, and stay centered under clear lane markings. They can struggle with construction zones, odd merges, faded paint, and confusing signage. Your eyes stay up, hands stay ready, and you take over early when the road gets weird.
Simple habits that keep it boring
- Use driver-assist features where lane lines are clear and traffic flow is predictable.
- Keep a light grip so the car can sense you’re engaged.
- Turn it off before a messy interchange, not after it starts to drift.
- Don’t treat a smooth five-minute stretch as proof it will handle every situation.
| Label you’ll hear | What it usually includes | How it’s often sold |
|---|---|---|
| Cruise control only | Speed control, often with traffic matching | Included on many builds |
| Autopilot | Adaptive cruise + lane centering | Included in some regions, optional in others |
| FSD (Supervised) | Expanded assisted driving features under supervision | Monthly add-on in many markets |
| “It’s self driving” | A sales claim, not a feature set | Verify on the car, not in a listing |
| “All Teslas have it” | Hardware is common; enabled features vary | Confirm with Software and Autopilot menus |
Buying Checklist That Answers The Question For Your Tesla
If you want a clean answer for a specific car, run this checklist. It works for a new order, a used listing, or a private sale.
Five checks that settle it
- Get the package name in writing: Autopilot, FSD, or none.
- Look at the in-car Software tab: installed packages show up there.
- Open the Autopilot menu: steering features should be visible and configurable.
- Ask “upgrade or subscription?” and confirm the billing status inside the Tesla app.
- Transfer ownership fast: you want the VIN under your account before you assume anything.
Once you do those checks, “Does every Tesla have Autopilot?” turns into a safer question: “What driver-assist package is active on this exact car today?” That’s the answer that protects your wallet.
References & Sources
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).“Levels of Automation.”Defines driver responsibility across automation levels, including Level 2 driver assistance.
- California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV).“DMV Finds Tesla Violated California State Law.”Summarizes California’s findings on marketing language for “autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving Capability.”
- Tesla.“Autopilot Hardware Requirements.”Describes the camera and processing hardware Tesla uses for driver-assist features.
- Tesla.“Full Self-Driving (Supervised).”Describes the feature set and states that active supervision is required.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.