Autonomous driving company Wayve has hit an $8.6 billion valuation after securing fresh funds from Nvidia, Microsoft and Uber.
The $1.2 billion Series D round was led by Eclipse, Balderton and SoftBank Vision Fund 2 and also featured automakers Mercedes-Benz, Nissan and Stellantis.
Uber will invest up to an additional $300 million in milestone-based capital.
“We are building for a total addressable market that spans every vehicle that moves,” Alex Kendall, Wayve CEO, said in a statement.
“This investment accelerates our path to widespread commercial deployment and positions us to build the autonomy layer that will power any vehicle everywhere,” he added.
Founded in 2017, U.K.-based Wayve is building autonomous driving software and AI models and has become one of Europe’s most valuable startups. The company had raised upwards of $1 billion prior to this round.
In 2025, Wayve signed a partnership with Nissan to integrate its AI into the company’s driver-assistance systems, with vehicles featuring the tech to be deployed from 2027.
The startup also has plans with Uber to launch public robotaxi trials beginning in London in 2026, before a wider rollout to more than 10 markets globally, Wayve said.
While autonomous driving has been promised by tech companies for years, the sector has faced technical and regulatory hurdles. Level 5 automation, where cars self-drive anywhere without the need for humans in the loop, has remained elusive.
But Recent advances in AI have led to renewed hope in the sector.
On Tuesday, Alphabet-owned Waymo announced it had opened its robotaxi service to some public passengers in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Orlando.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has increasingly been touting the company’s credentials as an autonomous mobility leader and Amazon’s Zoox opened up rides to the public in 2025.


