Tesla’s Full Self-Driving technology has taken a significant step forward with a recent real-world achievement that is turning heads. A Tesla owner, David Moss, has successfully driven over 10,000 consecutive miles using Full Self-Driving (Supervised) without a single intervention. This remarkable feat doubles a milestone he achieved just weeks prior.
Moss shared that his 2025 Model 3 Premium (formerly Long Range) RWD has surpassed the 10,000-mile mark of “non-rounded up actual true 100% intervention-free” driving using FSD 14.2. This accomplishment spans more than a month of daily use across 24 U.S. states, with the car autonomously handling everything from highway driving to city streets, parking maneuvers, and even Supercharger stops.
What sets this milestone apart is the transparency behind it. Moss has been tracking his progress through telemetry data verified by the third-party Whole Mars FSD Database leaderboard, which pulls directly from Tesla’s vehicle data. This information is now accessible through Tesla’s Self-Driving Stats panel, a feature introduced with FSD 14.2 that monitors the real-world miles where FSD is actively engaged.
This isn’t Moss’ first noteworthy drive. Earlier this month, his Model 3 reached 5,000 miles on FSD without any interventions, putting it ahead of other documented cases. Notably, a Tesla Cybertruck owner recently shared a 1,200-mile intervention-free FSD drive, which was considered impressive at the time.
Moss’ 10,000-mile achievement comes as Tesla continues to advance autonomy. The company has started testing “unsupervised” FSD on Robotaxi vehicles in Austin, running without drivers, safety monitors, or passengers onboard. Elon Musk has expressed confidence in Tesla’s progress towards solving autonomy, and extended real-world drives like Moss’ help reinforce that belief.
While Full Self-Driving remains supervised for consumer vehicles, accomplishments like Moss’ showcase the advancements in Tesla’s software within a relatively short timeframe. Whether this level of performance becomes widespread across the fleet remains to be seen, but Moss is on track to become the first person to complete a coast-to-coast drive entirely on FSD without any interventions. Follow his progress on X and track his FSD mileage on the Whole Mars FSD Database.
Overall, Moss’ milestone of 10,000 miles without intervention highlights the progress and potential of Tesla’s Full Self-Driving technology, paving the way for more autonomous driving experiences in the future.

