A fleet of eVTOLs could take off as early as June, the US Department of Transportation announced.
The federal government announced a new pilot program designed to get new kinds of ultralight vehicles and “eVTOLs” up and running around the country—even if they’re not fully FAA-certified.
Eight cities are currently testing electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, known as "flying cars," as the Federal ...
The aircraft could include taxi and emergency medical response services, regional transportation, and autonomous flights.
On Monday, the U.S. Transportation Department (DOT) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) greenlit a sprawling, three ...
Urban air mobility company Archer Aviation placed Texas on the short list for testing air taxis while national proposals were announced by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Texas is set to become a testing ground for flying cars as the FAA and TxDOT launch a first‑of‑its‑kind pilot program ...
Eight states in the U.S. have been selected for a three-year pilot program that will allow aircraft models to transport passengers and cargo.
Flying cars aren’t science fiction anymore. Companies like Alef Aeronautics are taking orders for vehicles that drive on roads and fly through the air. But the technology comes with eye-watering costs ...