Autonomous, battery-electric railcars — freight that moves itself. In the field and earning since April 2025.
The world's first commercial autonomous railcar deployment: three TugVolts have been moving Carmeuse's Michigan limestone in revenue service since April 2025 — over 6,000 miles and climbing.
No new track. No locomotive. No diesel.
A standard freight car, retrofitted to drive itself. Battery-electric. Cameras and sensors instead of a crew. Built in St. Louis, scaling toward 1,000 a year.
Hover or tap a location for the story
The world’s first commercial autonomous railcar deployment. In revenue service since April 2025 — 350,000+ tons moved, with repeat expansion making up $77M of active proposals.
From world's first to two continents in one year: Intramotev was the first company to commercially deploy an autonomous railcar in revenue service — and in the year since, it signed three more large, scalable customers. Behind it all: rail is a $515B market today, with a $2.7T trucking market to win back.
Camp Shelby, Mississippi — the US Army’s Operation Sentinel Justice: soldiers used TugVolts to stage and reposition railcars for loading. No locomotive, no specialized crew. The need is chronic: qualified Army rail crews are at all-time lows, some locomotives in service are 60–90 years old, and 141 rail-connected installations still have to move.
A $20M term sheet from a top global infrastructure fund with more than $30 billion under management, at a $210M pre-money valuation. It anchors a $40M Series B to build the future of freight.
Term sheet is non-binding and subject to definitive documentation and closing. The fund stays unnamed until signing.
The $40M scales manufacturing toward 1,000 TugVolts a year, replicates inside contracted customer networks, and opens mainline rail in 2026. Every deployment makes the network smarter and autonomous freight harder to ignore. This is the beginning of freight that moves itself, everywhere.
15 years leading Boeing engineering and manufacturing teams. Raised over $25M, grew the company past 50 people.
Boeing materials and physics engineer. Designed eVTOL battery and powertrain systems, then the TugVolt.
Air Force logistics veteran. Nestlé and Unilever brand builder. Landed the first paying customers.
Ran Wabtec, the world's largest freight locomotive maker. Grew revenue 5× to over $8B.
30 years in railcar leasing. CEO of InStar Group, a multi-billion-dollar rail leasing platform.
Retired US Army two-star general. Commanded all surface logistics for the US Army.
The future of freight is already in the field. The term sheet is on the table.