Free to read. Sign up to save your progress and take knowledge-check quizzes.

Sign up free
5 min read·Updated April 29, 2026

Mobileye

Mobileye logoBy Mobileye

Mobileye is the vision-based ADAS and autonomous-driving AI platform (Intel-owned) supplying technology to over 30 global automakers — covering Advanced Driver Assistance Systems and progressing toward higher levels of vehicle autonomy.

Listen to this lesson

Free preview · first 0:30
0:00 / 0:30

Audio & video lessons are paid features

Plus unlocks audio streaming. Pro adds downloadable audio, video, certificates, and more.

Plus adds:
  • Audio streaming
  • Downloadable PDFs
  • All AI Playbooks
  • Personalized content
Pro also adds:
  • Certificates of completion
  • Audio MP3 downloads
  • Video lessonssoon
  • & More…soon

Watch this lesson

Video coming soon

Learning Objectives

  • Understand Mobileye's role in automotive AI and ADAS
  • Identify the customer base and strategic positioning
  • Evaluate Mobileye in the broader autonomous-vehicle competitive landscape

What Is Mobileye?

Mobileye is the vision-based ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems) and autonomous-driving AI platform supplying technology to over 30 global automakers. Originally an Israeli startup, Mobileye was acquired by Intel and operates as a public-listed Intel-controlled subsidiary. Mobileye's technology powers ADAS features (lane keeping, automatic emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, blind-spot monitoring) in millions of vehicles globally.

The strategic positioning: where Tesla vertically integrates its own driving AI (FSD), Waymo focuses on robotaxis, and Cruise (GM) had varying success, Mobileye operates as the dominant Tier 1 supplier to the broader auto industry — letting traditional automakers (BMW, Audi, GM, Ford, Volkswagen, Hyundai, etc.) deploy ADAS and progressively higher levels of autonomy without building everything in-house.

Tip

Visit Mobileye: mobileye.com — sold to global automakers; Mobileye is a public-listed Intel subsidiary (MBLY)

Status & Customer Base

Mobileye sells EyeQ chips (custom AI accelerators) and driving AI software to OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers) for integration into production vehicles.

Mobileye SuperVisionPer-vehicle licensing
  • Hands-free highway driving
  • Production deployments
  • Premium consumer-tier ADAS
Mobileye DrivePer-vehicle licensing
  • Higher-level autonomy
  • Limited deployment regions
  • Robotaxi and shuttle applications
Mobileye CES (Cooperative Eyes)Per-vehicle licensing
  • Crowdsourced HD mapping
  • Vehicle-to-everything (V2X)
  • Underlying capability
EyeQ ChipsPer-chip pricing
  • Custom AI accelerators
  • Integrated into vehicle electronic control units
  • EyeQ6 + EyeQ7 generations
OEM PartnershipsMulti-year automotive contracts
  • 30+ global automakers
  • Long lead times
  • Multi-year vehicle-program cycles

Mobileye's economics scale with global vehicle production — meaningful given roughly 80 million vehicles produced globally per year.

Core Capabilities

Vision-Based Driving Perception

Mobileye's core technology. Camera-first perception for driving environments — detecting and classifying lane markings, vehicles, pedestrians, traffic signs, traffic signals, and other driving-relevant objects. Where Tesla has expanded camera-only perception, Mobileye pioneered the camera-centric approach over a decade earlier.

EyeQ Chips (Custom AI Accelerators)

Mobileye designs custom AI accelerator chips (the EyeQ family) optimized for driving perception. EyeQ6 and EyeQ7 are current and forthcoming generations — embedded in vehicle electronic control units to run perception and decision algorithms in real time at automotive-grade reliability.

Mobileye SuperVision

Premium-tier consumer ADAS. Hands-free highway driving in production deployments — competitive with GM Super Cruise, Ford BlueCruise, Hyundai HDA. Cars equipped with SuperVision can drive themselves on highways under driver supervision.

Mobileye Drive

The higher-level autonomy product. Mobileye Drive targets robotaxi and shuttle applications in limited deployment regions — stepping beyond consumer ADAS into commercial autonomous services.

Crowdsourced HD Mapping

Mobileye uses vehicles already on the road to crowdsource HD map data — letting customer OEMs feed their fleets' driving data back into Mobileye's mapping infrastructure. Network effects compound as more vehicles deploy Mobileye technology.

Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X)

V2X communication lets vehicles exchange data with each other, infrastructure, and pedestrians. Important for cooperative driving and progressively more autonomous deployments.

30+ Global OEM Customers

Mobileye supplies over 30 global automakers — including BMW, Audi, GM, Ford, Volkswagen, Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, and many others. Diverse customer base reduces dependency on any single OEM cycle.

Strengths

  • 30+ global automaker customer base: Diverse, established
  • Vision-based pedigree: Decades of camera-perception development
  • EyeQ custom chips: Hardware + software vertical integration
  • Crowdsourced HD mapping: Network effects from deployed fleet
  • SuperVision + Drive product tiers: Covers consumer ADAS through robotaxi
  • Intel ownership backing: Long-horizon capital + chip-design synergies
  • Public-listed scale: MBLY ticker; investor scrutiny + transparency

Limitations & Considerations

  • Tesla FSD vertical integration competition: Tesla's tightly-coupled approach has performance advantages
  • Robotaxi regulatory complexity: Mobileye Drive deployments slow vs Waymo
  • OEM cycle constraints: Multi-year vehicle programs slow product introduction
  • Chip supply chain dependencies: Like other AI accelerators, depends on TSMC manufacturing
  • Camera-only debate: Some competitors emphasize lidar; Mobileye has used both but emphasizes vision
  • Stock volatility: Public-listed; quarterly results affect strategic flexibility
  • Geopolitical exposure: Israel-based operations + global OEM customers

Best Use Cases

StakeholderWhy Mobileye MattersHow They Engage
Global automakers (BMW, GM, Audi, etc.)Tier 1 supplier for ADAS + progressively higher autonomyMulti-year program contracts
Consumers (vehicle buyers)SuperVision in equipped vehiclesBuy a Mobileye-equipped car
Robotaxi + shuttle operatorsMobileye Drive for limited deploymentsPartnership engagement
Auto industry investorsMBLY public stock + auto AI exposurePublic market access
Smart-city + transportation plannersV2X + crowdsourced HD mappingLong-term infrastructure planning

When to choose alternatives:

  • Vertically-integrated EV automaker → Tesla FSD for Tesla-controlled stack
  • Robotaxi-focused → Waymo for the most-mature robotaxi deployment
  • Pure-software autonomy → various startups (Wayve, Helm.ai, Tier IV)
  • Truck-specific autonomy → Aurora, Plus, Kodiak Robotics, others for trucking
  • Open-source autonomous driving research → Apollo, Autoware for open platforms

Key Takeaways

  • Mobileye is the dominant Tier 1 vision-based ADAS and autonomous-driving AI platform supplier — Intel-owned, public-listed, supplying technology to over 30 global automakers
  • Custom EyeQ chips combined with driving AI software run perception and decision algorithms in real time at automotive-grade reliability — vertical hardware + software integration
  • Product tiers: SuperVision (premium consumer ADAS, hands-free highway driving), Drive (robotaxi and shuttle applications), CES (crowdsourced HD mapping infrastructure)
  • 30+ global automaker customers — BMW, Audi, GM, Ford, Volkswagen, Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, and many others — give diverse customer base
  • Best fit for traditional automakers wanting Tier 1 ADAS supplier without in-house vertical integration; for EV-only vertical integration use Tesla FSD; for robotaxi focus use Waymo; for trucking use Aurora or similar

Save your progress & take the quiz

Sign up free to bookmark lessons, track which modules you've completed, and lock in what you learned with a quick knowledge-check quiz at the end of each lesson.

🧭Recommended for you