Elon Musk declared Wednesday that Tesla is poised to join the ranks of companies developing artificial general intelligence (AGI), suggesting the electric vehicle maker may be the first to achieve the milestone through its work on humanoid robotics. In a post on X, the social media platform he owns, Musk stated that Tesla would likely be among the firms capable of creating AGI—a form of artificial intelligence that can perform intellectual tasks at or beyond human-level capability.
Pathways to AGI
Musk indicated that the breakthrough technology could emerge through Tesla’s development of humanoid robots and advanced manufacturing systems. The company has been actively developing Optimus, a humanoid robot designed to perform repetitive or dangerous tasks, as part of its broader robotics and artificial intelligence initiatives. Tesla has also invested heavily in autonomous driving technologies and the computing infrastructure required to train sophisticated AI systems.
Competitive landscape
Musk’s assertion places Tesla among a select group of technology companies racing toward AGI, including OpenAI, Google DeepMind and Anthropic. While Tesla has traditionally been viewed as an automotive and energy company, Musk has long positioned it as an AI and robotics firm, arguing that its real-world data from millions of vehicles provides unique advantages for developing intelligent systems.
Implications for the industry
If Tesla succeeds in achieving AGI through humanoid robotics or “atom-shaping” manufacturing—a reference to precise physical manipulation at microscopic scales—it would represent a fundamental shift in both artificial intelligence development and industrial automation. Such a breakthrough could accelerate Tesla’s ambitions in manufacturing efficiency while opening new frontiers in robotics applications across industries.