Author: Zhang Yaqi
Source: Wall Street News
Original Title: As 2025 Comes to an End, None of Musk's Promises Have Been Fulfilled
As 2025 draws to a close, a review of Musk's series of grand promises for the year—from the proliferation of autonomous driving technology to breakthroughs in artificial intelligence and reductions in government spending—reveals a comprehensive failure to deliver. The key timelines the tech titan had set for investors and the public have not materialized by year-end.
In Tesla's business, which has the most significant impact on capital markets, Musk explicitly told investors that by the end of 2025, Tesla's Robotaxi service would cover half of the U.S. population and no longer require human safety drivers. However, the actual operational situation starkly contradicts this guidance: the service is currently limited to parts of Austin, Texas, and still relies on in-vehicle safety monitors.
Beyond corporate shortcomings, the government efficiency department (DOGE) led by Musk also failed to meet its fiscal commitments. Despite Musk's vow to cut $2 trillion in federal spending, latest data show that federal spending not only did not decrease but, under DOGE's oversight, actually increased by approximately $248 billion in the first 11 months of 2025 compared to the same period last year.
This pattern of unfulfilled promises extends to space exploration and artificial general intelligence. Both SpaceX's long-term vision of sending humans to Mars and xAI's prophecy of achieving artificial general intelligence (AGI) within the year have been postponed. This systemic "overpromising and underdelivering" is prompting markets to reassess the credibility of Musk's future forward-looking guidance.
Robotaxi Coverage and Full Self-Driving Promises Fall Short
Tesla's progress in autonomous driving is a core focus for investors and one of the areas with the largest deviation from Musk's promises. During Tesla's Q2 earnings call in July, Musk asserted to investors that the Robotaxi service would cover half of the U.S. population by year-end. However, as the year ends, the service is operational only in Austin, Texas, and even local residents rarely spot these vehicles on the streets.
More critically, the promise of "fully driverless" technology remains unfulfilled. Musk repeatedly stated during the Q4 2024 earnings call and in public appearances in September, October, and December that by the end of 2025, Robotaxis operating in Austin would remove human safety drivers, achieving true "unsupervised" operation. Musk even claimed at an xAI hackathon in early December that the "unsupervised problem is largely solved." Yet, reality shows that, due to regulatory requirements in Texas and the current state of technology, Tesla's Robotaxi service still mandates human safety monitors in vehicles as of late December. Although Musk himself posted videos riding in fully driverless vehicles, this was confirmed to be only test runs; the service available to ordinary users has not eliminated human intervention.
DOGE Spending Reduction Target Fails
In public finance, Musk's performance as head of the newly established quasi-government agency DOGE also fell short of expectations. Following Trump's re-election, Musk promised to cut $2 trillion in "waste, fraud, and abuse" through DOGE. However, over time, this goal was first revised to $1 trillion and then reduced to hundreds of billions.
Market analysis indicates that DOGE did not achieve substantial savings. Data show that in the first 11 months of the 2025 calendar year, total federal government spending reached $7.6 trillion, an increase of approximately $248 billion compared to the same period in 2024. Analysis notes that many government contracts claimed to be canceled by DOGE remain effective, and its published data have been repeatedly criticized as inaccurate.
xAI's AGI and Roadster Demonstration Delayed
In artificial intelligence, Musk previously stated in a reply to Google AI Studio's Logan Kilpatrick on social media platform X that his company xAI would achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI) in 2025. However, this milestone was not reached within the year. According to Business Insider, Musk has postponed the AGI timeline to future years.
Additionally, highly anticipated hardware products failed to debut as promised. Musk revealed on Joe Rogan's podcast that Tesla would demonstrate the long-delayed Roadster prototype by year-end, hinting at possible "flying car" technology. Yet, with 2025 ending, the Roadster, which began taking pre-orders in 2017, remains unreleased, and the purported flying demonstration never materialized.
Mars Landing Plan Postponed
In space exploration, Musk's long-term timelines also faced setbacks. As far back as the 2016 Recode conference, in a conversation with Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg, Musk predicted that if plans proceeded smoothly, SpaceX should be able to launch a crewed rocket in 2024 and reach Mars by 2025. The reality is that as of the end of 2025, the goal of human landing on Mars remains unachieved, echoing his 2011 claim of "sending humans to Mars within 10 years," which also went unfulfilled.
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