Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredMurraytheDemonSkull posted Jan 13, 2023 04:18 AM
expiredMurraytheDemonSkull posted Jan 13, 2023 04:18 AM

2023 Tesla Model Y + $7,500 Federal Tax Credit

(For Qualifying Buyers)

$52,990

$52,990

12,285 Comments 2,615,102 Views
Visit Retailer
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Tesla has dropped the base price of the Tesla Model Y from $65,990 down to $52,990. This price reduction means the Model Y now qualifies for the $7,500 Federal Tax Credit (details here).

Thanks to Community Member MurraytheDemonSkull for finding this deal.

Additionally, the base prices of all Tesla vehicles have been reduced. The base Model 3 is now $43,990, which is $3,000 lower than before. The Model 3 Performance is now $53,990, which is $9,000 lower than before, and now qualifies for the tax credit.

Editor's Notes

Written by RazorConcepts
  • This is $13,000 lower (19% savings) than the previous base price.
  • Factoring in the tax credit, the price of the Model Y today is $20,000 less than one purchased in December 2022.
  • To qualify for the federal tax credit, one must not exceed the following adjusted gross income limits:
    • $300,000 for married couples filing jointly
    • $225,000 for heads of households
    • $150,000 for all other filers
  • The tax credit is not refundable, which means one must have federal tax due to take advantage of it. If the tax due is less than the credit amount, one can only claim the credit up to the amount of the tax due.
  • Refer to the forum thread for additional deal discussion.

Original Post

Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Tesla has dropped the base price of the Tesla Model Y from $65,990 down to $52,990. This price reduction means the Model Y now qualifies for the $7,500 Federal Tax Credit (details here).

Thanks to Community Member MurraytheDemonSkull for finding this deal.

Additionally, the base prices of all Tesla vehicles have been reduced. The base Model 3 is now $43,990, which is $3,000 lower than before. The Model 3 Performance is now $53,990, which is $9,000 lower than before, and now qualifies for the tax credit.

Editor's Notes

Written by RazorConcepts
  • This is $13,000 lower (19% savings) than the previous base price.
  • Factoring in the tax credit, the price of the Model Y today is $20,000 less than one purchased in December 2022.
  • To qualify for the federal tax credit, one must not exceed the following adjusted gross income limits:
    • $300,000 for married couples filing jointly
    • $225,000 for heads of households
    • $150,000 for all other filers
  • The tax credit is not refundable, which means one must have federal tax due to take advantage of it. If the tax due is less than the credit amount, one can only claim the credit up to the amount of the tax due.
  • Refer to the forum thread for additional deal discussion.

Original Post

Community Voting

Deal Score
+839
Good Deal
Visit Retailer

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

TofuVic
19698 Posts
27789 Reputation
If anyone is interested in hard numbers to figure out how much less expensive it is now compared to Tesla's best deal of 2022 - $7,500 discount with 10,000 free Supercharger miles - I bought a Tesla Model Y Long Range 7-Seater with white interior in late December 2022.

Excluding taxes and fees, I paid $63,940. It's now $59,630, which is $4,310 less, and it is eligible for the $7,500 tax credit. That means if I didn't buy it in December and bought it today, I would have saved $11,810 + sales tax, so a bit over $12,000 in savings I missed. (I got 10,000 Supercharger miles, which is worth somewhere between $500 and $1,000.) With taxes and fees, I paid $71,578.55 in total.

For those who do order, I recommend this Tesla Prep guide [glideapp.io] to check for build quality issues on delivery day.

I hope this helps,
Tofu Vic
oceanone
1290 Posts
286 Reputation
Tesla plans to add a new radar product to its vehicles in mid-January, according to documents posted with the Federal Communications Commission.

The disclosure, which was first reported by Electrek, comes as the company faces scrutiny over the safety and capabilities of its standard advanced driver assistance system known as Autopilot and the $15,000 optional upgraded product branded as "Full Self-Driving." Tesla FSD beta software offers some automated driving features but is not a self-driving system.

The luxury EV-maker has long claimed it could reach full autonomy through a "vision only" approach that shuns other sensors like lidar and radar in favor of cameras and a deep neural network that quickly processes a vehicle's surroundings and responds in real time. Tesla CEO Elon Musk previously promised to "solve" full self-driving by the end of this year (he's also promised Tesla would get there every year for roughly nine years now). He has recently admitted the problem will take longer to solve.

And perhaps, as every other autonomous vehicle technologist says, it's not actually achievable yet through cameras alone.

The company began removing radar from its vehicles last May. In October, Tesla removed its 12 ultrasonic sensors from Model 3 and Model Y vehicles built for North America, Europe, the Middle East and Taiwan. Ultrasonic sensors measure distance via ultrasonic waves and are used as proximity sensors to support anti-collision safety systems, particularly in parking use cases.

Now it appears radar is back. It's not yet clear which models will get the new radar. The type of radar Tesla intends to market next year is of a frequency that's allocated by the FCC for ADAS use cases, according to Ram Machness, chief business officer at Arbe Robotics, which produces ultra-high-resolution 4D imaging radar.

Tesla had originally filed with the FCC to use the new radar — which is described in filings as "76-77 GHz Automotive Radar" — in its vehicles back in June.

"From the frequency of operation (76-77GHz) as well as the mechanical design of the sensor from Tesla's FCC filing, it appears that this radar would be utilized in ADAS applications," Steven Hong, VP and general manager of radar technology at semiconductor company Ambarella, told TechCrunch.

He noted that while the performance of this "edge" radar sensor will be limited, it's a positive development that Tesla is looking to add radar to its perception stack for safety-critical, robust performance.

Earlier this year, the FCC had granted a confidential treatment to Tesla in order to keep the details of the new radar under wraps. Late last month, Tesla applied to extend that confidentiality treatment another 60 days from its date of expiration, which is December 7.

i hope this answers your question
AkumaX
13111 Posts
2952 Reputation
edit: ACTUAL LINK TO DEAL https://www.tesla.com/modely/design (SD's link goes to existing inventory page)
Wayback Machine if anyone wants to do some research: https://web.archive.org/web/20220...ely/design

I'll throw out some notable 'milestones' , focusing only on the Model Y LR base model:

* Feb 2021 - $49,000 - Roughly the lowest price for the Y LR (not including the SR @ $42k)
From this point forward, Tesla started increasing the price about $1-2 every month or so, until it peaked out at $66,000. Ex:
* May 2021 - $51,000
* July 2021 - $53,000, etc...
* Feb 2022 - $59,000, etc...
* July 2022 - $66,000 <-- peak
* Dec 1 2022 - $66,000 (-$3750 credit/refund)
* Dec 15 2022 - $66,000 (-$7500 credit/refund)
* Jan 1 2023 - $66,000 back to peak (-$7500 fed tax credit only on 7-seater)
* Jan 13 2023 - $53,000 (-$7500 fed tax credit on base model + 7-seater but not performance)
* Jan 23 2023 - $53,500 (-$7500 fed tax credit on base model + 7-seater but not performance)
* Feb 4 2023 - $55,000 (-$7500 fed tax credit on all models)

12,284 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 13, 2023 12:28 PM
25 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
iamharshJan 13, 2023 12:28 PM
25 Posts
Quote from supren :
No. only for 2023.
I meet the income requirement in 2022, won't in 2023. So I can ask for credit in 2023 income tax returns next year, that correct?
Jan 13, 2023 12:28 PM
22 Posts
Joined Aug 2018
GCustomJan 13, 2023 12:28 PM
22 Posts
Quote from oceanone :
Tesla plans to add a new radar product to its vehicles in mid-January, according to documents posted with the Federal Communications Commission.

The disclosure, which was first reported by Electrek, comes as the company faces scrutiny over the safety and capabilities of its standard advanced driver assistance system known as Autopilot and the $15,000 optional upgraded product branded as "Full Self-Driving." Tesla FSD beta software offers some automated driving features but is not a self-driving system.

The luxury EV-maker has long claimed it could reach full autonomy through a "vision only" approach that shuns other sensors like lidar and radar in favor of cameras and a deep neural network that quickly processes a vehicle's surroundings and responds in real time. Tesla CEO Elon Musk previously promised to "solve" full self-driving by the end of this year (he's also promised Tesla would get there every year for roughly nine years now). He has recently admitted the problem will take longer to solve.

And perhaps, as every other autonomous vehicle technologist says, it's not actually achievable yet through cameras alone.

The company began removing radar from its vehicles last May. In October, Tesla removed its 12 ultrasonic sensors from Model 3 and Model Y vehicles built for North America, Europe, the Middle East and Taiwan. Ultrasonic sensors measure distance via ultrasonic waves and are used as proximity sensors to support anti-collision safety systems, particularly in parking use cases.

Now it appears radar is back. It's not yet clear which models will get the new radar. The type of radar Tesla intends to market next year is of a frequency that's allocated by the FCC for ADAS use cases, according to Ram Machness, chief business officer at Arbe Robotics, which produces ultra-high-resolution 4D imaging radar.

Tesla had originally filed with the FCC to use the new radar — which is described in filings as "76-77 GHz Automotive Radar" — in its vehicles back in June.

"From the frequency of operation (76-77GHz) as well as the mechanical design of the sensor from Tesla's FCC filing, it appears that this radar would be utilized in ADAS applications," Steven Hong, VP and general manager of radar technology at semiconductor company Ambarella, told TechCrunch.

He noted that while the performance of this "edge" radar sensor will be limited, it's a positive development that Tesla is looking to add radar to its perception stack for safety-critical, robust performance.

Earlier this year, the FCC had granted a confidential treatment to Tesla in order to keep the details of the new radar under wraps. Late last month, Tesla applied to extend that confidentiality treatment another 60 days from its date of expiration, which is December 7.

i hope this answers your question
This could be speculative, they've been adamant that the only way they're adding radar back is if it's HD, the last radar was for occupancy detection inside the vehicle. This product with the extended confidentiality could be an upgrade of that, but it could also be HD radar or something for the Semi or Cybertruck.
Jan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
54 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
SpySpyderJan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
54 Posts
Quote from supernoman :
Thanks for the info and sucks for the loss.
Bad luck
Jan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
846 Posts
Joined May 2013
SamirPDJan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
846 Posts
Quote from EliteDealHunter :
Yep. Kind of funny when I went to the service center with my car and they would have 50-100 Model Ys in the service lot each time. The car has only been in production for what, 2 years? Go to a Honda dealer and see how many cars are in for overnight service that are less than 2 years old.
Those are for delivery. Big Grin Have you noticed how the service techs aren't rushed? Because there's actually not that much work that had to be done under high pressure environment like in traditional service departments where technicians are encouraged to not put bolts back in that they remove. True story from a good friend who once saw a Ferrari leave with so many bolts still in the 'bolt bucket' you couldn't see the bottom of the bucket. OMG
Jan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
54 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
SpySpyderJan 13, 2023 12:29 PM
54 Posts
Quote from supernoman :
Thanks for the info and sucks for the loss.
There is no fed credit for performance edition which sucks
Jan 13, 2023 12:30 PM
846 Posts
Joined May 2013
SamirPDJan 13, 2023 12:30 PM
846 Posts
Quote from davem1234 :
Yes but Carvana won't give you the title or plates even after 8 months of waiting. Found that out the hard way.
Interesting. Did you buy outright or finance through them? When financing, you don't own the car, the financer does.
Jan 13, 2023 12:30 PM
17 Posts
Joined Mar 2018
jdang7891Jan 13, 2023 12:30 PM
17 Posts
Quote from iamharsh :
I'm confused, then how do I get the tax credit?

If you owe $10,000 tax then with $7,500 credit, you now owe the fed $2,500.
Last edited by jdang7891 January 13, 2023 at 05:34 AM.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 13, 2023 12:32 PM
1,539 Posts
Joined Oct 2004
hunter44102Jan 13, 2023 12:32 PM
1,539 Posts
Quote from SamirPD :
So to preface, I own 10 cars and maintain I think another 4 so I basically oversee a fleet of 14 that vary in age from 1994 to 2019.

Of all these cars, the least maintenance and most trouble free is the Tesla--not the Mercedes, not the Porsche, not the Accord, not the Altima, not the Kizashi, but the Tesla. It isn't perfect in terms of body lines, but none of the cars in the fleet are perfect and they all have defects if you look for them. The question is if those defects matter and the answer is no because they are smaller than any car that has ever had collision work.

Even with the enjoyment of some of the 'fun' cars like the e55 AMG, I'll still take the Tesla--why? Because I simply come home and plug it in (if I want to) and that's it--no oil change, no other maintenance to worry about because it's a simpler car. That's one of their very overlooked benefits--nearly zero maintenance. And maintenance adds up, even if you're doing it on your own (which I do). I hope GM doesn't have EV maintenance because if they're doing EVs right there is no maintenance. But since traditional manufacturers made a significant amount of money off of maintenance, there is still maintenance so they can break something so you can come back to pay them to fix it. laugh out loud

CA's grid and power mismanagement is an endless mess that's just the usual human greed and short sighted stupidity--has nothing to do with Tesla or EV cars. But all the solar will probably help eventually fix this as people just stop using the grid.

If you're financing a car (or anything right now), then the interest rates are a real concern for things making financial sense.

But the numbers on a Tesla don't work like a regular car as there is more CapEx and less OpEx. So cost being the same between choices you're paying up front for the Tesla, but a lot less on an ongoing basis, and most of it is in maintenance savings imo vs fuel savings.
For twice the price of equivalent ICE car, the Tesla -better- be the best car in the fleet
Jan 13, 2023 12:32 PM
846 Posts
Joined May 2013
SamirPDJan 13, 2023 12:32 PM
846 Posts
Quote from ElatedHill7496 :
Tesla invited hundreds of Chinese engineers and chinese workers from Shanghai to come to the US tesla factory just for speeding up the production. Even if you buy tesla from the US, they are still made by Chinese.
Ah, standard chinese propganda--probably why I've seen hundreds of chinese at the fremont factory, right? NOT. And the Texans will flat out kill you guys, lol. They have lots of guns!
4
Jan 13, 2023 12:33 PM
435 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
Nero_ForteJan 13, 2023 12:33 PM
435 Posts
Tesla hit the slickdeals lmao 🤣
Jan 13, 2023 12:33 PM
1,510 Posts
Joined Feb 2010
nojmpleaseJan 13, 2023 12:33 PM
1,510 Posts
Quote from SamirPD :
Of all these cars, the least maintenance and most trouble free is the Tesla--not the Mercedes, not the Porsche, not the Accord, not the Altima, not the Kizashi, but the Tesla.
That's comparing apples and oranges - any EV, on average, is going to be more maintenance-free (and hopefully trouble-free) than an ICE. Far fewer moving parts, etc.

Tesla was far ahead of the pack for the past decade, but now that the other marques are going full-force into EV production, Tesla's lead is quickly fading. Once the other charging networks catch up (where Tesla still has a big first mover advantage), I expect Tesla will go from being 'amazing futuristic tech darling' to another average quasi-luxury brand, and it's public market valuation will hopefully reflect that.
Jan 13, 2023 12:34 PM
2,227 Posts
Joined Feb 2013
ZeeDuckJan 13, 2023 12:34 PM
2,227 Posts
Quote from oceanone :
Tesla plans to add a new radar product to its vehicles in mid-January, according to documents posted with the Federal Communications Commission.

The disclosure, which was first reported by Electrek, comes as the company faces scrutiny over the safety and capabilities of its standard advanced driver assistance system known as Autopilot and the $15,000 optional upgraded product branded as "Full Self-Driving." Tesla FSD beta software offers some automated driving features but is not a self-driving system.

The luxury EV-maker has long claimed it could reach full autonomy through a "vision only" approach that shuns other sensors like lidar and radar in favor of cameras and a deep neural network that quickly processes a vehicle's surroundings and responds in real time. Tesla CEO Elon Musk previously promised to "solve" full self-driving by the end of this year (he's also promised Tesla would get there every year for roughly nine years now). He has recently admitted the problem will take longer to solve.

And perhaps, as every other autonomous vehicle technologist says, it's not actually achievable yet through cameras alone.

The company began removing radar from its vehicles last May. In October, Tesla removed its 12 ultrasonic sensors from Model 3 and Model Y vehicles built for North America, Europe, the Middle East and Taiwan. Ultrasonic sensors measure distance via ultrasonic waves and are used as proximity sensors to support anti-collision safety systems, particularly in parking use cases.

Now it appears radar is back. It's not yet clear which models will get the new radar. The type of radar Tesla intends to market next year is of a frequency that's allocated by the FCC for ADAS use cases, according to Ram Machness, chief business officer at Arbe Robotics, which produces ultra-high-resolution 4D imaging radar.

Tesla had originally filed with the FCC to use the new radar — which is described in filings as "76-77 GHz Automotive Radar" — in its vehicles back in June.

"From the frequency of operation (76-77GHz) as well as the mechanical design of the sensor from Tesla's FCC filing, it appears that this radar would be utilized in ADAS applications," Steven Hong, VP and general manager of radar technology at semiconductor company Ambarella, told TechCrunch.

He noted that while the performance of this "edge" radar sensor will be limited, it's a positive development that Tesla is looking to add radar to its perception stack for safety-critical, robust performance.

Earlier this year, the FCC had granted a confidential treatment to Tesla in order to keep the details of the new radar under wraps. Late last month, Tesla applied to extend that confidentiality treatment another 60 days from its date of expiration, which is December 7.

i hope this answers your question
"confidential treatment" So basically Tesla didn't want to let customers know they had been lied to.

Perhaps they were concerned about videos of "autopilot" cars hitting kids.
1
Jan 13, 2023 12:34 PM
846 Posts
Joined May 2013
SamirPDJan 13, 2023 12:34 PM
846 Posts
Quote from p0tempkin :
I think Tesla has a fantastic product. But as a petrolhead, we're currently living through the twilight years of ICE, with some of the best motors ever created being released right now.

Manufacturers have all but shutdown major R&D of ICE motors going forward, so this is it. Ford's Voodoo, GM's LT6, BMW's S58, Porsche's 4.0 flat six, Mercedes Bi-Turbo V8, etc.

I know at some point in the next decade everyone needing a new car will only have electric options to choose from. Most states will ban new gas car sales after 2035, if not sooner. But until then, I'd like to still feel the vibration and hear the noise of an engine ripping to redline.
Well said. It was amazing how fast 0-60 times dropped once the Teslas came one the scene, lol.

I thought I would miss the v8 rumble, exhaust tones and more, but now I just enjoy the silence and actually feel more connected to the road because I can actually hear it now. Plus, that endless torque...whoooo is that fun!
Jan 13, 2023 12:36 PM
845 Posts
Joined Apr 2008
dashinghunkJan 13, 2023 12:36 PM
845 Posts
A used CPO 2020 Model Y with 35K miles is same price as a new 2023 model now?

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 13, 2023 12:37 PM
846 Posts
Joined May 2013
SamirPDJan 13, 2023 12:37 PM
846 Posts
Quote from Gb1908 :
Just so nose blind to seeing this as a perk to the rich. Until the battery range, charge tomes, charge network price and moving beyond lithium happen, this is a wealthy persons vehicle.
It depends on your definition of wealthy. There an article that shows how the model 3 is actually cheaper to own than the camry when you look at it over time. And I wholeheartedly agree after having ours for a few years and the almost zero maintenance costs.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Related Searches

Popular Deals

Trending Deals