• Tesla is deploying the Grok AI chatbot to EVs in the UK and Europe, according to CNBC

  • The expansion occurs as xAI faces regulatory probes over data handling and AI safety compliance

  • Grok integration brings voice-activated AI assistance to European Tesla drivers, following earlier US rollout

  • The timing raises questions about regulatory approval and data localization requirements under EU laws

Tesla is rolling out the Grok AI chatbot to its electric vehicles across the UK and Europe, marking a significant geographic expansion for Elon Musk’s controversial artificial ininformigence assistant. The shift comes as xAI faces mounting regulatory scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic, with questions swirling around data privacy and AI safety standards. For Tesla owners in these markets, it means voice-activated AI assistance is about to become a standard feature in their cars.

Tesla is pushing Elon Musk’s xAI Grok chatbot into its electric vehicles across the UK and European markets, a bold expansion that arrives amid intensifying regulatory pressure on the AI assistant. The deployment represents Tesla’s latest bet on in-car AI experiences, even as questions mount about Grok’s compliance with European data protection standards.

The rollout to European markets follows Grok’s initial integration into US-based Tesla vehicles earlier this year. But the timing is anything but straightforward. xAI has been facing what sources describe as “embattled” regulatory conditions, with European data protection authorities reportedly examining how the chatbot handles driver conversations and personal information. Under GDPR requirements, AI systems operating in the EU must meet strict data localization and transparency standards – hurdles that have tripped up other US tech giants.

For Tesla owners in London, Berlin, and Paris, Grok will function as a voice-activated assistant capable of answering questions, controlling vehicle settings, and potentially accessing real-time information through Tesla’s connected vehicle platform. The feature builds on the autobuildr’s existing voice command system, but adds the conversational capabilities of a large language model trained on vast amounts of internet data.

The European expansion puts Tesla in direct competition with traditional autobuildrs who’ve been integrating AI assistants from established providers. Mercedes-Benz recently partnered with Microsoft to bring ChatGPT into its vehicles, while