Elon Musk didn’t say we’re getting close. He said we’re already there.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO on Sunday replied to two separate posts on X with one unmistakable claim: “We have entered the Singularity.” Hours later, he followed it up with a second post: “2026 is the year of the Singularity.” Both were in response to engineers marveling at what AI tools can now do—cranking out years of work in weeks and reshaping how software is built.

We have entered the Singularity

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That phrase—”the Singularity”—isn’t something Musk tossed in for flair. It’s a long-standing concept in tech and science fiction that refers to the moment when artificial intelligence surpasses human intelligence and begins improving itself. Once that happens, the idea goes, the pace of innovation explodes beyond human control. At that point, the future becomes less a straight line and more a rocket—fast, unpredictable, and fundamentally altered.

The idea dates back to the 1950s, when mathematician John von Neumann suggested technology was accelerating so quickly it could trigger a fundamental transformation in society. His colleague, Stanislaw Ulam, described it as a “singularity.”

Science fiction writer Vernor Vinge later expanded on the idea in the 1980s and 90s, predicting that once machines became smarter than humans, we’d lose the ability to meaningfully forecast what happens next.

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Ray Kurzweil pushed the conversation further into the mainstream with his 2005 book “The Singularity Is Near,” estimating it could happen around 2045.

Musk isn’t putting it decades away. He’s saying it’s already here.

The context behind his comments matters. One user wrote about completing more coding projects over Christmas break than in the last ten years. Another described former OpenAI and DeepMind engineers calling today’s AI tools “insanely powerful,” with one saying Claude had compressed six years of engineering knowledge into just a few months. Musk’s responses weren’t warnings. They were timestamps.

But it’s not just about code. Musk has been building toward this moment across platforms. In late 2025, during the U.S.–Saudi Investment Forum, he predicted that AI and robotics would eventually make traditional work “optional” and money will “disappear as a concept.”

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At the Viva Technology Conference in Paris in May, he said a future with intelligent humanoid robots could produce everything people need, making material scarcity obsolete. “In the benign scenario, probably none of us will have a job,” he said, adding, “There will be universal high income.” His message was blunt: humans would no longer need to work to survive. They’d work for fun—like playing a video game.

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That’s the upside. But Musk also made it clear that he doesn’t see the future as fully safe. He said he would prefer to slow AI down, but admitted that’s likely impossible. The competitive pressure to keep pushing forward is too great. As he put it during xAI’s Grok 4 July livestream, “Even if it wasn’t gonna be good, I’d at least like to be alive to see it happen.”

For investors and startups, this is the territory they’re already entering. AI-first companies aren’t just promising—they’re redefining speed. The tools Musk is referring to are letting builders compress timelines, cut costs, and ship products faster than ever. If an early-stage startup can move at a pace that once required a 200-person team, the power dynamic in tech shifts. This isn’t just about software. Robotics companies are building physical tools that could replace labor in warehouses, restaurants, and even homes.

Musk has said that Tesla’s humanoid robot Optimus could be worth more than everything else Tesla does. He believes robots could help eliminate poverty—not just through charity or policy, but by flooding the economy with abundant labor and production. If they succeed, productivity explodes. If they don’t, the fallout could be staggering.

For everyday people, it’s hard to know what to make of it. Musk says robots will make life easier. He also says they might make it meaningless. Either way, the Singularity isn’t coming. In his words, it’s already here. And 2026, according to Musk, is the year it becomes unmistakable.

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This article Elon Musk Says ‘We Have Entered the Singularity’ Declaring This The Year AI Becomes Smarter Than Humans — And Everything Changes Forever originally appeared on Benzinga.com

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