TechCrunch is closing out 2025’s transportation narrative with a stark reminder that even in a year of rapid progress, the sector remains unforgiving: two prominent mobility companies have entered bankruptcy proceedings. In its latest Mobility newsletter, TechCrunch reports that Rad Power Bikes has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, while troubled lidar maker Luminar has also filed for bankruptcy, signaling a likely end to the business as it is sold off in pieces.
The filings land at a moment when the “future of transportation” is simultaneously accelerating—particularly in robotaxis and adjacent autonomy services—and consolidating, as capital markets and customers demand clearer paths to profitability, dependable execution, and durable commercial contracts.
Rad Power Bikes seeks Chapter 11 protection while pursuing a sale
According to TechCrunch, Rad Power Bikes filed for Chapter 11 weeks after warning employees that the company could shut down without new funding. A spokesperson told TechCrunch that Rad plans to continue operating while the bankruptcy case proceeds and is seeking to sell the business within 45 to 60 days.
The move highlights a broader pressure point across the electric mobility ecosystem: consumer-facing hardware brands can grow quickly, but they often carry high costs in inventory, warranty support, retail logistics, and after-sales service. When financing conditions tighten, even well-known names can find themselves squeezed between rising operating expenses and the need to keep prices competitive.
For customers, Chapter 11 filings often raise immediate questions about support and continuity. Rad’s statement that it intends to keep operating during proceedings will be closely watched by riders, dealers, and service partners who depend on parts availability, repairs, and honoring existing commitments.
Luminar bankruptcy points to an orderly wind-down, not a rescue
The situation at Luminar appears more final. TechCrunch reports that the lidar company filed for bankruptcy after months of layoffs, executive departures, and a legal dispute with its largest customer, Volvo. The filing indicates the company plans to sell off the business, and it has already reached a deal to sell its semiconductor subsidiary.
While Luminar says it will continue operating during the bankruptcy process to “minimize disruptions” for suppliers and customers, TechCrunch notes the company is expected to cease to exist once the process is completed. Senior reporter Sean O’Kane described the bankruptcy as a planned sale-and-shutdown scenario rather than a restructuring designed to keep the company alive long-term.
Why lidar economics remain difficult
Lidar has long been positioned as a critical sensor for advanced driver-assistance systems and autonomous vehicles, but the commercial reality has been complicated. Automakers want safety improvements and reliable performance, yet they also demand aggressive pricing, long validation cycles, and strict delivery guarantees. For suppliers, the result can be years of heavy R&D spending with limited near-term revenue, followed by intense margin pressure once a contract finally arrives.
TechCrunch also points to the significance of Luminar’s relationship with Volvo in the company’s trajectory. When a major customer relationship deteriorates—especially one large enough to anchor revenue expectations—it can quickly ripple through financing, supplier confidence, and the company’s ability to maintain staffing and production plans.
A year of innovation, bookended by failures
TechCrunch Mobility frames the latest bankruptcies as part of a larger pattern: 2025 began with notable transportation bankruptcies and ends with two more. Yet the newsletter also emphasizes that the year was not defined solely by collapse. The industry saw continued innovation, particularly as the robotaxi market moved from pilot projects toward broader deployments.
That growth is reshaping the competitive map. Waymo has been a key driver of scale and visibility, while Zoox and Tesla have been building their own footholds. TechCrunch suggests 2026 could bring more direct market overlap among these players, as well as heightened scrutiny on safety performance and how autonomous services integrate into everyday life.
New “autonomy-adjacent” companies are emerging
As robotaxi operations expand, a secondary ecosystem is forming around them—companies that focus on fleet support, mapping, remote assistance, simulation, sensor maintenance, charging logistics, and other operational layers required to run autonomy at scale. TechCrunch expects this “autonomous vehicle-adjacent” category to become a more visible trend in 2026, reflecting the reality that autonomy is as much an operations business as it is a software and hardware challenge.
EV headwinds continue as the market matures
Alongside autonomy’s rise, EVs continued to face challenges in 2025. TechCrunch notes that automakers struggled to adjust, a dynamic shaped by shifting demand, pricing battles, and the ongoing complexity of scaling manufacturing and supply chains profitably.
In this environment, the gap between technological ambition and financial endurance becomes more visible. Companies building physical products—whether electric bikes, sensors, or vehicles—must balance long development timelines with the immediate demands of cash flow, customer support, and production reliability.
What the bankruptcies signal for 2026
The Rad and Luminar filings are different in structure and likely outcome, but together they underscore a shared message for the mobility sector: capital is no longer satisfied with growth narratives alone. Investors and strategic partners are increasingly prioritizing repeatable unit economics, bankable customer contracts, and operational discipline.
- Consumer mobility brands may face intensified pressure to prove sustainable margins and service models.
- Autonomy suppliers will be judged not only on performance claims, but also on contract durability, pricing power, and delivery execution.
- Robotaxi operators may find opportunity in the shakeout, but will also face greater public and regulatory scrutiny as deployments scale.
For an industry that thrives on bold bets, 2025’s closing chapter is a reminder that the future of transportation is being built in real time—and that not every company will make it to the next on-ramp.

