A couple of days ago, Musk confirmed that Tesla’s third-generation vehicles can’t achieve Full Self-Driving (FSD) through software alone. Shortly after, roughly 3,000 Hardware 3 (HW3) owners across 29 European countries signed onto a collective legal claim, centered aorund €6.5 million already spent in the name of FSD purchases.
As a response, Tesla (via an X post) has committed to bringing FSD V14 Lite to HW3 cars in the international markets. The catch, however, is that the software won’t arrive until after the automaker is done with the U.S. rollout. Even then, it’s surrounded with more ifs and buts than buyers would appreciate.
Is FSD V14 Lite what HW3 buyers paid for?
Not exactly. A lot of the Tesla HW3 buyers paid up to €6,400 for FSD in 2019, on the promise that their vehicles would eventually drive themselves. However, the now-promised FSD V14 Lite isn’t even remotely similar.
Even though Tesla hasn’t confirmed exactly what FSD V14 Lite is, it sounds like a stripped-down version of the latest FSD software that operates on the same level as Level 2 driver-assistance systems. In other words, it might still require the driver to be attentive and in control at all times during a drive.
A Teslarati report throws an optimistic light on the V14 Lite’s anticipated feature set, stating that the update could unlock better handling in complex urban scenarios, improved parking, and reverse parking features (though I’ll remain skeptical about it). However, it still isn’t as good as the unsupervised, hands-free drive experience that thousands of buyers paid for.
When will international HW3 owners get the promised update?
The U.S. rollout of the V14 Lite update is expected around the end of June 2026. Currently, international customers sit in a queue behind them, with an additional three approval hurdles to clear, which include technical verification, regional adaptation, and regulatory approvals.
None of the procedures has a timeline attached to it. Hence, international buyers might be waiting for months after Tesla is done with the U.S. rollout. To me, it looks like the V14 Lite update buys Tesla some time and reduces the legal pressure, at least for the time being.






