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Aurora Innovation Stock Slides as $10 Billion Driverless Truck Bet Enters 2026 Test
29 March 2026
2 mins read

Aurora Innovation Stock Slides as $10 Billion Driverless Truck Bet Enters 2026 Test

PITTSBURGH, March 29, 2026, 15:05 EDT

Aurora Innovation, Inc. (AUR) finished Friday at $4.12, slipping 2.6%. With that, the self-driving truck firm sits at a $9.95 billion valuation, as it pushes toward a 2026 target of more than 200 driverless trucks on the road. That’s about $10 billion in market cap for a business that generated just $3 million in revenue last year.

The stakes are high for Aurora this year as the company targets a move past initial freight runs, aiming to expand its Sun Belt network. Back in February, Aurora laid out plans for over 200 driverless trucks on the road before year-end and stuck with a 2026 revenue projection between $14 million and $16 million.

Aurora is looking to maintain its early advantage. In the latest shareholder letter, the company reported hitting 250,000 driverless miles by January, with a spotless safety record—no collisions attributed to Aurora Driver. Aurora also said it had already launched the first driverless commercial trucking operations on U.S. public roads in 2025 and noted that its commercial truck capacity is sold out through the third quarter of 2026.

Aurora pushed to broaden the conversation this month. On March 19, the company published a Steer Group study it commissioned, arguing autonomous trucking could add up to $70 billion to U.S. GDP by 2035, slash shippers’ fuel bills by $5.7 billion annually, and put $9 billion more in Americans’ wallets each year. CEO Chris Urmson described the tech as a “massive engine for the American economy.” Tara Andringa, with Partners for Automated Vehicle Education, noted the industry is already “supporting jobs and economic activity across the country.” Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Still, the disconnect between narrative and financials remains stark. Aurora posted just $1 million in fourth-quarter revenue, up against a $238 million operating loss and $581 million in projected 2025 operating cash usage. Liquidity stood near $1.5 billion at year-end. CFO David Maday told investors that revenue for 2026 will be “back-end loaded”—he expects most of it to show up late, as the company ramps up its driverless fleet. Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Aurora’s newest software drop sits at the core of its strategy. According to the company, it’s now validated a roughly 1,000-mile driverless corridor from Fort Worth to Phoenix—no need to worry about Hours of Service limits, the federal cap on human trucker shifts. Aurora also says it has greenlit driverless runs in rain, fog, and high winds—weather that sidelined its Texas self-driving fleet about 40% of last year.

Aurora’s broader operating range isn’t just for show—it’s designed to give carriers more practical options. Hirschbach, named as an early customer, is already running the Fort Worth-Phoenix route. The company is leaning on automated mapping and updated endpoint tools to push beyond its Dallas-Houston starting point, opening up lanes that reach Fort Worth, El Paso, Phoenix, and Laredo.

Aurora isn’t the only player in motion. Gatik, back in January, announced $600 million in contracted revenue and said its driverless trucks were already running commercially. Kodiak AI, for its part, disclosed a partnership with Bosch this year aimed at rolling out scalable hardware for self-driving trucks. Competition in autonomous freight is intensifying.

The policy landscape remains in flux. According to the Transportation Department, after its March 11 AV safety forum, Urmson was there alongside Waymo and Zoox executives as regulators issued fresh technical guidance and new regulatory measures. Aurora, in its annual report, flagged that upcoming safety tests, regulatory approval hurdles, and a maze of different state laws could put the brakes on commercialization or push back revenue.

At this point, investors are looking for solid signs that rollout goals can actually translate into sustainable profits. Aurora projects its fresh trucks will put it on track to have over 200 driverless rigs on the road and be running at about $80 million in annualized revenue by the end of 2026. Still, as Friday’s close made clear, the street is holding out for real proof that Aurora can hit those milestones on time.

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