Tesla FSD v14 Adds Speed Profiles in International Rollout

Tesla's latest Full Self-Driving (Supervised) build is reaching more international markets with selectable speed profiles and noticeably smoother starts, stops and parking.

3 min read
Tesla FSD v14 Adds Speed Profiles in International Rollout

AUSTIN, Texas — Tesla has begun pushing Full Self-Driving (Supervised) version 14 to more drivers outside North America, and the change owners are noticing first is a new set of selectable speed profiles that let the car match its pace to the moment.

Sloth to Hurry, on the Scroll Wheel

The v14 release introduces four driving modes — Sloth, Chill, Standard and Hurry — that drivers can cycle through using the right-hand scroll wheel on the steering wheel. The setting governs how assertively the car accelerates, takes gaps and carries speed, giving owners a simple way to move the system between relaxed cruising and brisker, more confident progress. It is a meaningful upgrade over v13, which offered far less control over the car's temperament, and it arrives as Tesla continues widening access across hardware tiers, including its plan to bring a lighter build to older cars detailed in its FSD v14 Lite rollout for HW3 vehicles.

A Smoother Start and Finish

Beyond the speed modes, early hands-on reviews of the update — including a detailed first drive published by The Driven — singled out how much better v14 behaves at the very beginning and end of a trip. Those transitions, where the car has to move between a parked state and live traffic, have long been the hardest moments for automated systems to handle gracefully.

Tesla FSD v14 Adds Speed Profiles in International Rollout — additional image

Reviewers said v14 pulls out of and into spaces far more naturally, with parking in particular drawing praise for a precision earlier versions lacked. One write-up summed it up by saying the system could now drive patiently and park cleanly, a combination owners have wanted for years. The full first-drive impressions are detailed by The Driven.

Software at the Center

The international expansion underscores how central software has become to Tesla's story. As the company's vehicle business matures, investors are increasingly focused on autonomy, the Robotaxi program and recurring software revenue rather than quarter-to-quarter unit growth — a shift visible even in how the company frames its Q2 2026 delivery consensus.

Each new market that gains FSD adds more real-world miles to the fleet, and every mile feeds the neural networks that Tesla is counting on to deliver unsupervised driving. With v14 now widening its footprint, smoother behavior and driver-selectable speed profiles are giving owners a clearer preview of where the system is headed — and a more confident, more capable copilot on the road today.