
Drivers in Australia and New Zealand have trailed North America in access to the latest Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software, but that delay is ending.
Moving Past Version 13
According to the release notes for software update 2026.16.6, Tesla has started rolling out FSD (Supervised) version 14 in Australia and New Zealand. The exact build reaching vehicles is FSD v14.3.3, and it is currently arriving on Hardware 4 (HW4/AI4) vehicles.
This regional update follows just under a year after Tesla first launched FSD in Australia and New Zealand, initially bringing v13 to HW4 cars. While other international markets that have received FSD since, like South Korea, the Netherlands, Lithuania, and Denmark, moved directly to v14, Australia and New Zealand remained on the older branch. Tesla confirmed earlier this month that FSD v14 was coming to Oceania, and the deployment is now underway. This aligns with a broader effort to standardize the global fleet on the latest software, with China—where FSD was released in limited capacity even before Australia and New Zealand—on track to receive FSD v14 soon as well.
FSD Supervised is now available in Australia and New Zealand pic.twitter.com/0Lxsgz82na
— Tesla Australia & New Zealand (@TeslaAUNZ) September 17, 2025
Regional Differences and Missing Features
While receiving the v14 stack is significant, this international release does not match the North American variant exactly. It includes the unskippable FSD disengagement feedback menu, which first appeared in FSD v14.3.2, but the official local release documentation omits a couple of notable features present in North America.
Specifically, the notes do not mention the increased 8mph maximum speed for Actually Smart Summon (ASS) or the unification of the Summon, FSD, and commercial Robotaxi models. Here are the missing release notes:
- Actually Smart Summon max speed is now increased to 8mph (13km/h). (Added in FSD v14.3.3 in North America, not available on Cybertruck)
- Unified the model between Actually Smart Summon, FSD, and Robotaxi for more capable and reliable behavior.
The model unification, in particular, made Actually Smart Summon a lot more usable. Right now, it is unclear if Tesla simply omitted the text from the region's release notes or if the underlying ASS code was removed for the local market. Furthermore, the Oceanic build does not include the newer FSD streak celebrations and arrival parking options on the navigation map that were introduced with version 14.3.4.

Hardware 3 Owners Left Waiting
For now, the update is exclusive to newer HW4 cars. Owners of older Hardware 3 vehicles will have to wait a bit longer. Tesla is developing FSD v14 Lite for older hardware, a distilled, optimized model designed to deliver the same feature set as the main v14 branch on older FSD computers. Once FSD v14 Lite launches and passes validation testing, it will expand internationally to HW3 owners, including those in Australia and New Zealand, to ensure older models are supported as Tesla’s autonomy stack scales globally.













































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