Joined Mar 2010
L5: Journeyman
Popular
Price drop on every Tesla model - $49990
April 6, 2023 at
09:32 PM
in
Autos
Deal Details
Last Edited by jersharocks | Staff April 7, 2023 at 11:11 AM$49,990.00
Model 3 RWD $41990
Model 3 Performance Dual Motor AWD $52990
Model Y SR Dual Motor AWD $49990
Model Y LR Dual Motor AWD $52990
Model Y Performance Dual Motor AWD $56990
$5K off for Model S/X
$2K off for Model Y
$1K off for Model 3
Also, Model Y SR Dual Motor AWD can be customized for order.
https://www.tesla.com
Model 3 Performance Dual Motor AWD $52990
Model Y SR Dual Motor AWD $49990
Model Y LR Dual Motor AWD $52990
Model Y Performance Dual Motor AWD $56990
$5K off for Model S/X
$2K off for Model Y
$1K off for Model 3
Also, Model Y SR Dual Motor AWD can be customized for order.
https://www.tesla.com
1,742 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I'm at $900/year on a model Y I took delivery on 4 weeks ago.
No, only Model 3 RWD is getting reduced Model Y $7,500 Federal is going to be here I believe until a new announcement from IRS comes up with a change.
Dont think anything goes lower than $150/month without giving up significant coverage or something else in socal
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ilovecanada
Best car for city driving. 150 mile range and below 30k.
Love mine... Best decision ever
Same boat. Love my Leaf haha. Not as sexy as the tesla but is perfect for my commuter. Not much love in this forum for it, but it has my love.
I keep trying to talk my parents into an electric. Turns out they want their next car to be capable of road trips without extended refueling/charging times, so I think a plug-in hybrid is the compromise.
Ford delivered barely 10,000.
GM delivered barely 20,000...and 95% of those were the Bolt still using last-gen batteries
Latest data suggests Tesla has now passed brands like VW, Subaru, Mazda, and BMW in total US market share- as in Teslas EVs vs all types of cars from those brands…as well as Tesla holding the majority of ALL US EV sales.
That doesn't seem much like "struggling" from Tesla.
This is pretty econ 101 stuff... Tesla is continuing to scale production 35-50% higher every year. If you can easily sell 500k of a vehicle for X dollars, but now you want to make 1.5 million of them, you probably need to lower the price to find those extra 1 million buyers. That's not cutting prices due to pressure from the competition (which largely still does not exist in the US in any significant #s because legacy continues to be incompetent at scale production of EVs)- that's cutting prices to greatly increase your TAM (total addressable market). Thanks to Tesla having 2-3x the profit margins of everyone else they can easily do this while continuing to rack up profits... meanwhile Ford and GM are in no hurry to make more EVs because they lose money on each one.
Can you show me where I can get a Corolla that does ~3 seconds 0-60 and low 11s in the 1/4 mile from the factory?
I said cost not performance. Don't compare performance with costs. A Chevy bolt or Nissan Leaf can also do go 60 in 5 secs. My argument is the cost of parts that goes into the car.
Good luck have fun.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I started looking at the Tesla Y because it seems like a better value vs an MSRP X5. Im not a fan of the Y's interior options. That, not $, is what holds me back. Also, unfortunately, the avg car costs $40-50K now out the door. $50K doesn't get you luxury anymore. Maybe near-luxury, but certainly the Model Y isn't luxurious like a Model S or X.
I mean, it's not an asset that will appreciate in value in almost any case, but for most it can certainly be a functional investment that depreciates.
LR models already have 300-400 miles of range when you leave the house with a full charge.
One 10-15 minute supercharger stop- which you'd make in a gas car anyway to use the restroom/get drinks/gas/etc can get you to around 500 miles of total range on the day.
If you DO plan to drive >500 miles in a single day, which is pretty rare, a second such stop gets you up to 600-700 miles of range for the day.
Then you just stay at one of the myriad hotels or air bnbs with L2 charging and by morning you're "full" again.
So the "bad for road trips" thing is really only true for non-Tesla EVs without access to a good fast charging network... or for cannonball run types who want to go 1000 miles in a day and pee in a jar while doing it...
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.