Skip to main content

Toyota just invested $394M in a secretive startup that makes flying taxis

Numerous electric-powered flying taxis whizzing about over busy cities may sound like the stuff of sci-fi, but a number of significant players are working hard to make it a reality.

Recommended Videos

Take Toyota. The Japanese car giant has just pumped a hefty $394 million into Joby Aviation, a California-based company developing an all-electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft for fast, quiet, and affordable air transportation services.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The automaker will also share its expertise in manufacturing, quality, and cost controls to support the development and production of Joby’s flying taxi, versions of which it has been working on for a decade.

Toyota’s financial backing is part of a bigger cash boost for Joby that came in a recent funding round worth $590 million, bringing Joby’s total funding to date to an impressive $720 million.

Joby Aviation

“We are building a new system for transportation to transform your daily life, at greater safety and, in time, at a similar cost to driving,” JoeBen Bevirt, Joby’s founder and CEO, said in a release. “This collaboration with Toyota represents an unprecedented commitment of money and resources for us and this new industry from one of the world’s leading automakers.”

Joby’s piloted five-seat aircraft switches to wing-borne forward flight after taking off vertically using multiple rotors. It can reach 200 mph and fly around 150 miles on a single charge. Joby says the vehicle is “100 times quieter than conventional aircraft during takeoff and landing,” and “near-silent” when flying overhead.

Toyota president and CEO Akio Toyoda described air transportation as a “long-term goal” for his company, adding, “As we take up the challenge of air transportation together with Joby, an innovator in the emerging eVTOL space, we tap the potential to revolutionize future transportation and life.”

News of the massive cash injection comes just a week after Korean car giant Hyundai unveiled the S-A1, a flying taxi it is building in partnership with Uber. Other firms around the world are also working on similar designs in what could be a lucrative market for those that can make it happen.

But current challenges include persuading regulators of the safety of the flying machines, as well as the safety of the airspace in which they fly. Their environmental impact in areas such as noise will also be a consideration. The Federal Aviation Administration is already nervous enough about much smaller drones flying over urban areas, so it’s likely to be a while before it gives the green light to the kind of service Joby Aviation and others are proposing.

Still, with continued backing from big companies and proper planning, the sight of taxis flying overhead could one day become a reality.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
14 awesome flying taxis and cars currently in development
Porsche Boeing flying taxi

Some of the brightest engineers in the world are racing to make science fiction-esque flying taxis a reality. None are ready to fly you over Manhattan, but the more optimistic companies say they're getting very close. While we wait to take our first sky shuttle, we're taking a look at the companies tussling for a piece of this burgeoning segment.
AeroMobil's prototype

Slovakia-based AeroMobil remains committed to releasing a functioning flying car it calls "a supercar with superpowers." It's on its fourth prototype, so you know it's not joking.

Read more
Watch first footage of Joby’s all-electric VTOL aircraft in flight
watch first footage of jobys all electric vtol aircraft joby aviation evtol

With some serious financial backing from the likes of Toyota and Intel, Joby Aviation appears to really be going places with its all-electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, or eVTOL for short.

California-based Joby has been working on its flying machine for the last 10 years and wants to use it to launch an air taxi service.

Read more
United Airlines to order 200 flying taxis for airport trips
united airlines to order 200 flying taxis for airport trips archer evtol aircraft

United Airlines is betting big on urban mobility with plans to purchase 200 electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft for deployment "within the next five years."

The carrier wants to use small aircraft from Californian aviation startup Archer to shuttle its customers from urban areas to nearby airports for their main flight, though the deal, and the aircraft itself, require regulatory approval before any shuttle service can launch.

Read more