Tesla has secured provisional approval from the Danish Road Traffic Authority, Færdselsstyrelsen, for its “Full Self-Driving” (Supervised) system, marking the fourth European country to greenlight the software in roughly eight weeks. The decision follows Denmark's earlier expression of concerns about the technology at the EU level.

The approval comes amid a rapid European rollout, with three other nations having authorized the system in the preceding weeks. Exact details on deployment timelines or vehicle eligibility remain undisclosed in the source material.

This represents a significant inflection in European regulatory posture toward Tesla's advanced driver-assistance systems. The move suggests some member states are now diverging from earlier collective caution, though the provisional nature leaves long-term status uncertain.

While the approval is a win for Tesla's market expansion strategy, it does not resolve lingering safety and liability questions across the bloc. The European Commission has not yet issued a harmonized framework for FSD-like technologies.

No specific price, production, or infrastructure figures were cited in the reporting. The story focuses entirely on the regulatory milestone rather than operational or financial data.