Europe's first commercial robotaxi service rolls out in Croatia


The Verne RoboTaxi's dashboard displays real-time traffic as it drives through downtown Zagreb on May 4, 2026. — AFP

ZAGREB: For nearly a month, a Croatian company has been rolling out what it says is Europe's first robotaxi service on the streets of Zagreb, with AFP among the first journalists to try it on Tuesday.

Backed by Uber and powered by Chinese self-driving firm Pony.ai, Croatia's Verne has operated 10 automated vehicles for a select number of customers in the city since April 8.

Despite similar services being available in China and the United States for years, multiple companies are still competing to bring autonomous taxi services to European roads.

Verne's service is intended to be fully autonomous, with a human "operator" temporarily behind the wheel during the current phased rollout, in case intervention is needed.

Smooth operator

During AFP's ride with the service, which the company says is used by 300 people, the operator – a Verne employee named Deni Link – never had to step in.

The mostly smooth ride was only interrupted when an oncoming vehicle veered into the wrong lane, forcing the car to stop suddenly.

"Sorry, we had to brake," a calm woman's voice told AFP and the other passengers.

Despite the often chaotic Croatian traffic and complicated intersections, Verne's head of country operations, Filip Cindric, said most rides are completed "without any intervention".

According to Cindric, who accompanied AFP during the ride, 90 percent of riders gave the service four or five stars, with no reported collisions over tens of thousands of kilometres.

Gradual expansion

Although the service was first announced in early April, sightings of the vehicles on Zagreb streets have been rare.

For now, the vehicles operate in the city centre, parts of the south, and around the airport, Verne CEO Marko Pejkovic told AFP.

"Expansion is gradual, with each new zone introduced only after detailed validation and once the system is proven reliable in real-world conditions," Pejkovic said in a statement.

According to the company, interest in the automated service, which costs €1.99 (US$2.32/RM9.16) per ride, has been strong, with around 4,000 people currently on the waiting list.

Pejkovic said the low price was aimed at enticing users and encouraging feedback, with prices expected to rise as the service grows.

More cities to come

Ordered through Verne's app like any rideshare service, the automated vehicles are equipped with multiple cameras, lidar lasers and radars to help navigate the streets.

Verne, founded in 2019, said discussions were under way in 11 cities across the European Union, the United Kingdom, and the Middle East.

In Zagreb, it aims to transition to fully driverless operations by the end of the year, subject to regulatory approvals.

With 30 additional cities now being considered, Cindric said he was proud that Zagreb was the first to make it happen.

"If it were that easy, it would already exist in London or some other major European city," he said. – AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Amazon's Chile data center moves ahead after residents lose environmental challenge
Uber-backed Lime reveals revenue surge in US IPO filing
Cloudflare's slowing growth disappoints investors betting on AI boost
Google has bit more time to address concerns in EU investigation, EU Commission says
Logitech bets on AI, gaming and business users as it raises spending, CEO says
Sony, Nintendo grapple with memory price surge as AI boom constrains supply
The scam services 'helping' people to check in for flights – for fees
Sony, TSMC plan new Japan joint venture for next-generation image sensors
Samsung Electronics' union says to enter mediation over wage dispute
Colleges around the world see web outages after vendor hack

Others Also Read