Bot Auto Completes Human-Less Hub-To-Hub Validation Run In Texas

Sep 16, 2025

Bot Auto, a two-year-old autonomous trucking company preparing to launch a Transportation-as-a-Service (TaaS), business model, today announced the successful completion of its first human-less hub-to-hub validation run. According to the company, the truck operated within its defined operational domain with no one in the cab and no remote assistance, successfully navigating real-world traffic conditions. The run was executed at sunset, so as to navigate both day and night operations.
Bot Auto, based in Houston, Texas, is not yet at the point of launching TaaS driverless freight runs. Instead, this milestone serves as a validation benchmark, demonstrating the current maturity and safety of Bot Auto’s autonomy stack and test protocols. Bot Auto says this milestone, accomplished in less than two years, underscores their unique approach of “combining next-generation AI technologies with laser-focused execution.”
If you had been recently hanging around Riggy’s Truck Parking, just off I-10 in Katy, TX, you might have seen the truck launch and return. Importantly, this was not just an interstate highway trip. From Riggy’s, the vehicle handled surface streets for about 1.5 miles and then took the entrance ramp for I-10, traveling west until making the overpass turn-around at Exit 725 so as to head back east and back to Riggy’s. The roundtrip was approximately 40 miles. But if you didn’t watch it live, no worries: here’s the video.
Prior to the run, Bot Auto completed end-to-end safety verification and validation for the defined Operational Design Domain (ODD), including rigorous closed-course autonomy testing. To further safeguard operations, the truck was equipped with multiple layers of protection, including diversified redundancy, continuous health monitoring, and verified minimum-risk fallback designed to maintain intended performance under normal conditions and to respond safely to unexpected events.
“This validation run is a meaningful step, but it’s a waypoint, not the destination,” said Dr. Xiaodi Hou, Founder and CEO of Bot Auto. “Success is simple: autonomy must beat human cost-per-mile, consistently and safely. And at Bot Auto, human-less means no human — not in the driver’s seat, not in the back seat, and not behind a remote joystick.”
Other companies in the space have launched driverless commercial operations or plan to do so soon. Aurora made several driverless runs earlier this year before reverting back to safety driver operations at the request of their truck manufacturer partner; the company’s status as a driverless operation is somewhat murky. In addition to Bot Auto, Waabi also plans to launch driverless commercial freight operations by the end of this year. And in the short-haul B2B space, Gatik says it will launch driverless commercial freight operations by year end.
If all this comes to pass and the vehicles operate as expected, this will signal a significant upshift towards the commercialization of road freight powered by autonomous driving.
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Forbes