Tesla's New FSD Streak Celebrations: What They Are, Milestones, and More

Drivers using Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (Supervised) may now see on-screen celebrations when they reach an intervention-free streak milestone. The company has added a new way to track miles without takeovers, highlighting a driver’s longest uninterrupted autonomous stretches.
Confetti on the display
The celebration screens and animations are rolling out with FSD v14.3.4, which began reaching vehicles earlier this month with software update 2026.14.6.10. When a milestone is achieved, colorful confetti appears across the main touchscreen.
Here’s what happens when you hit an FSD streak milestone on @Tesla V14.3.4 pic.twitter.com/bIhKJPNrOe
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) June 14, 2026
The animations trigger at these uninterrupted FSD (Supervised) milestones:
- 100 miles
- 250 miles
- 500 miles
- 1,000 miles
- 5,000 miles



If you already built up a long streak before this update appeared on your car, the display will celebrate each applicable milestone in sequence once the software starts. Currently, there are no additional animations beyond the 5,000-mile mark.
Longtime Tesla enthusiast David Moss (@DavidMoss) previously went almost 13,000 miles on FSD without an intervention. He recently became the first Tesla owner to surpass 10,000 miles of uninterrupted FSD (Supervised) usage since the new streak counter launched (via @SawyerMerritt).
Congrats @DavidMoss on being the first Tesla owner to cross 10,000 miles with the new FSD streak counter feature! That's equivalent to driving 40% of the way around the Earth without touching the steering wheel or pedals once.
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) June 20, 2026
Looks like the confetti celebration only occurs at… pic.twitter.com/d1qTUQKFat
The gamification of FSD
The streak celebrations continue a trend of gamification in recent releases. FSD v14.2 introduced a Self-Driving Stats section that compares autonomous and manual miles. Later, Tesla added intervention-less FSD streaks via a widget on the left side of the main screen, directly above the speed limit indicator.
This approach can motivate owners to accumulate more miles, supplying data for Tesla’s neural networks, but it also raises safety concerns. Rewarding long streaks may cause some drivers to delay taking control in challenging situations to avoid resetting their count. FSD remains a supervised system, and safety should always take priority over any digital milestone.












































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