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frontpage Posted by saran.rmk • Apr 19, 2023
frontpage Posted by saran.rmk • Apr 19, 2023

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

(For Qualifying Buyers)

$47,240

$49,990

5% off
2,339 Comments 1,039,912 Views
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Deal Details
Tesla has dropped the base price of the Tesla Model Y from $52,990 down to $46,990-> Now $47,240. All Model Y vehicles also qualify for the $7,500 Federal Tax Credit (details here).

Thanks to Community Member saran.rmk for finding this deal.

Available models:
  • Tesla Model Y (Standard Range) $46,990 -> Now $47,240
  • Tesla Model Y (Long Range) $49,990 -> Now $50,240
  • Tesla Model Y (Standard Range) $53,990 -> Now $54,240

Editor's Notes

Written by RazorConcepts
  • This is $6,000 lower (12% savings) than the previous base price.
  • See the previous frontpage deal from the January price drop.
  • 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.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.

Original Post

Written by saran.rmk
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Tesla has dropped the base price of the Tesla Model Y from $52,990 down to $46,990-> Now $47,240. All Model Y vehicles also qualify for the $7,500 Federal Tax Credit (details here).

Thanks to Community Member saran.rmk for finding this deal.

Available models:
  • Tesla Model Y (Standard Range) $46,990 -> Now $47,240
  • Tesla Model Y (Long Range) $49,990 -> Now $50,240
  • Tesla Model Y (Standard Range) $53,990 -> Now $54,240

Editor's Notes

Written by RazorConcepts
  • This is $6,000 lower (12% savings) than the previous base price.
  • See the previous frontpage deal from the January price drop.
  • 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.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.

Original Post

Written by saran.rmk

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Top Comments

aohus
1274 Posts
489 Reputation
if you have any questions on Model Y lmk, I just purchased one a couple months ago, but paid $4k over current sticker price fml

EV good if you have a dedicated charging station at home.

if you live in an apartment complex or condo its not as consumer friendly, unless you want to pay up the wazoo at supercharger stations and inconvenience yourself by having to go there every time to charge. Go to plugshare.com to see how much you will be paying in your area. Just multiply cents * 45kwh (assuming you're charging from 20% to 80%). For my area I would be paying $20-$25 per charge at a supercharger station. At home, with the national average electrity rate of 0.14 / kwh, it would cost $6

if you live in california, don't forget that you can also get another $2k in CVRP rebate. you get a check in the mail but the wait time is long to get it.

also don't forget about the single occupant HOV lane decal you can sign up at the DMV website.

basic autopilot is more than sufficient. autopilot still has a long ways to go imo. definitely not worth getting the advanced AP and definitely not full self driving at $15k. as MKBHD always says, don't buy a product on a promise of features yet to come.

also, make sure you setup your electricity usage to "time of use" or EV-specific plan as your bill will assuredly go up. Don't be on those tiered plans. Yes, you will end up saving money compared to ICE vehicles paying for gas, unless you get a hybrid, which is a bit more comparable, especially in areas where electricity is expensive.

additionally, people forget that you need to install a wall connector or mobile connector in your home. equipment costs $230 for the mobile connector +$45 for the nema 14-50 adapter, which is good enough especially if you do scheduled charging at night to save on electricity. installation itself will vary depending on your region and how much electricians will charge you, but it can get expensive. just make sure you're not getting ripped off as electricians are aware of the EV craze and asking for higher premiums on them. installation can go anywhere from $1k-$2k+. (according to poster SamirPD, you can ask the electrictian to install a dryer outlet and it should save you money and prevent you from being ripped off). One worthy note, EV charger and installation is tax deductible at 30%, just need to fill out the tax form [irs.gov] when you do your taxes next year. EDIT: SD poster hiro916 indicated that the 30% tax deduction only pertains to low income or rural tract areas, so YMMV [reddit.com].

as for car insurance, I'm paying $95 a month through Geico, but thats with a robust policy.

if you are impatient like me, and want to get one right away without having to wait, go to the waitingfortesla discord server [discord.com] and setup alerts for any time a Model Y drops in your local area. You have to act quick as they get snatched up relatively quickly. You can see whats in inventory on their website too [waitingfortesla.com]. Don't expect to see base model Y LR coming into inventory. If you want to pick something up quick settle for the 20 inch induction wheels (costs $2k extra) as they are more readily available. You can always sell the tires if you want to recoup some of the costs and get an aftermarket hubcap that look better than stock anyhow.

If you're interested in a real world range comparison of current popular EV's check out this YT video [youtube.com].

once you pick up your car you have 100 miles and 7 days to report any defects. panels gaps aren't as much of a problem anymore compared to years past, but be on the lookout for them. paint quality isn't so great out of the factory, mine came with swirl marks all over and had to get it paint corrected.

if you're concerned about battery degradation, you can take a look at this site [teslalogger.de] (select dropdown and look for Y LR AWD US to see the average degradation over time based on mileage. on average after 50k miles you should see about a 10% degradation, and it will degrade more slowly 50k+ miles onwards.

in terms of accessories, the only real requirement imo that you need are mud flaps. reason being is because without them, the rear passenger quarter panels will get hit with rock chips very quickly. tesmanian is a good aftermarket seller, or you can just opt for ones you see on amazon. if you want to go deeper into accessories temu is a great site for low prices compared to amazon.

if you like to nerd out on graphs, data, and overal health of your vehicle, get a program called teslamate that can be installed on your home server. every time your car parks in your garage it will send driving telemetry data to it with pretty graphs [teslamate.org] and all.

you can also opt to get teslausb [github.com], which can wirelessly send all your dashcam footage to your home server every time you pull into your garage.

my personal thoughts on ownership thus far. overall i like it. i am using it as a daily driver / commuter car. i don't think of Model Y and 3 as a 'luxury' vehicle. I see Tesla as a software company trying to be an automaker, and the legacy automakers are trying to be more like Tesla by being more tech focused. Teslas are continuously getting software updates to improve year over year. Interior build quality is spartan, and the ride quality need some improvement, especially if you are in an area with poor road conditions. if you're really into tech like me, this is the car for you. Performance vehicles I still prefer ICE cars over EV's however. first thing you will notice in an EV though, is the instant torque. that is what will grab you immediately.

If you have questions and need instant feedback join the Tesla discord, I'm active on there and other members can assist with questions you may have: https://discord.com/invite/tesla
fireserphant
462 Posts
587 Reputation
In case folks are interested in how prices have tended over time, there is this very handy tracking sheet [google.com]
ancientman
522 Posts
118 Reputation
Double check your insurance rate before buying this

2,338 Comments

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Apr 22, 2023
11,341 Posts
Joined May 2007
Apr 22, 2023
superslickz
Apr 22, 2023
11,341 Posts
Quote from MrCrispy :
Well I'm not an expert and haven't looked at new cars and def not SUVs. From your post it appeared most a 30k SUV didn't exist so I was curious and looked on kbb, edmunds etc and found a lot. Obviously there will be extra fees added on etc, You also said 'in this class' not exact same features. Pretty sure some of these can be configured to have tech like HUD, 360 camera etc and for hybrid, for maybe 35k.

This is not a good time to be buying new cars. Prices are falling, economy sucks, new cars are a waste of money by definition due to depreciation. There are tons of used/CPO car deals suiting any budget

M3/Y are still great cars, I just think they are overpriced.
Well you read my post without the context of where it came from. Honestly, I really didn't even want o be a part of this discussion since I am not even a proponent of Tesla. But i had to reply to someone who claims you can find a "nice" comparable ICE SUV for 30k.

It's a well-known trick of car manufacturers to offer some low trim level of a car so that they can claim this car "starts" at xx.xx. However, most people would not want those starting trim levels, so you can't use that for comparison and articles who use those numbers are just not being thorough.

Again, i have been shopping for an suv for 10 months if not longer. Before that I was shopping for my other daughter just before the pandemic. It's a big difference. It's not just the price gouging which is finally going away. It's an overall increase in msrp (inflation) and less leverage to haggle down from the msrp (at least not as much as it use to be).
Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
Apr 22, 2023
phocean
Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Quote from MichaelH5734 :
Here's how finances around this work:

1. You are poor (been there) thus you can't afford this car, and already don't pay taxes, in fact get free gov money, nuff said. (The gov is not giving ANYONE 7500!)

2. You make up to 150k (single) or 300k (married) then pay actual taxes (generally) so you can get 7500 of those taxes wiped off your tax bill. Assuming you already paid in and/or owe 7500, or more. The gov gave you no money!

3. You make over those limits, you either live somewhere you can't afford, or manage your money poorly, and choose to complain about your entitlement (or lack of, in this case) since you don't get the 7500.

Nobody can get mad about #2, if you manage your finances correctly, are comfortably in the middle class, you can now (maybe) afford a car that was previously out of reach.

If you are #1, stop complaining and do something about it. Maybe learn how to do your taxes and go work at H&R Block doing taxes of those too dumb to do it themselves, you've stepped up in the world and can (maybe) afford this deal.

If you're in the third group, this is where YOU should be paying more taxes anyway, so zip it, and stop being selfish.
A $500k income family will have less than $200k spendable income after ss, federal, state, local, medical insurance and maxed out 401k/roth/hsa/529. After mortgage it does not have much more than other $300k families. Yes they are well off. I am just trying to say, the threshold shall not be a hard cutoff ... a slow phasing out shall be the more appropriate policy.
Last edited by phocean April 21, 2023 at 08:33 PM.
Apr 22, 2023
11,341 Posts
Joined May 2007
Apr 22, 2023
superslickz
Apr 22, 2023
11,341 Posts
Quote from jto :
I was considering the MY also but the latest MY has no USS (Ultra Sonic Sensor) is a big show stopper for me. People are reporting all sort of problems on MY without USS. Check Youtube for videos comparing MY Vision vs MY USS.

I think it's a very dumb decision from Tesla.
I haven't been following this in a while but i thought the last i heard was that they said they are bringing this back In January of this year. What's the latest news on this? Is it ever coming back?
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Apr 22, 2023
Knightshade
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Quote from MrCrispy :
This is all fine and good. The point people are making is that it should be much simpler
It IS simple.

People keep making it much harder than it actually is.

It's literally "Look at this one number- whatever that # says- that's what you get to a max of $7500."



Quote from MrCrispy :
T
and just a plain old rebate like it used to be before, without all this tax complication.
This is factually wrong.

It works exactly like it did before

It was always a non-refundable tax credit against your tax owed.

Always.

The only notable changes this go-round are:

No longer a cap on # of cars per car maker like there used to be.
There's a max price for what vehicles it applies to.



Quote from MrCrispy :
You can bet a large percentage of people will not know how to claim this correctly
Again- that part works exactly like the last EV credit

Which you appear to believe was easy enough for people.



Quote from MrCrispy :
Its an anti consumer practice no matter how you look at it.
It's really, really not.




Quote from robertw477 :
I assume the engine runs as you sleep with A/C on. 5 foot 6 when I was in 8th grade.

Uh- it's an EV. It doesn't have an engine.

AC just runs directly off the battery- which is why some folks use em for camping.

Also- they're awesome for anyone who still has a drive-in since you can keep the climate control going the whole time.



Quote from superslickz :
I haven't been following this in a while but i thought the last i heard was that they said they are bringing this back In January of this year. What's the latest news on this? Is it ever coming back?

USS? They never said they were bringing those back.

They said they would bring back the functionality it provided, but using cameras instead of USS.

Which they've now done. V1.0 isn't exactly the same (it's better at some things and worse at others) but as with most Tesla SW stuff it'll keep improving over time-- and unlike legacy cars, already-sold ones will get all the same updates for free in the future.
Last edited by Knightshade April 21, 2023 at 08:49 PM.
1
Apr 22, 2023
277 Posts
Joined Jul 2022
Apr 22, 2023
ScarletLake899
Apr 22, 2023
277 Posts
Quote from phocean :
A $500k income family will have less than $200k spendable income after ss, federal, state, local, medical insurance and maxed out 401k/roth/hsa/529. After mortgage it does not have much more than other $300k families. Yes they are well off. I am just trying to say, the threshold shall not be a hard cutoff ... a slow phasing out shall be the more appropriate policy.
Yep another reason I am not getting EV. Plus Model Y will not make it even for weekend off road warriors.
Apr 22, 2023
1,379 Posts
Joined Oct 2011
Apr 22, 2023
thinh4u2
Apr 22, 2023
1,379 Posts
Quote from Knightshade :
It IS simple.

It was always a non-refundable tax credit against your tax owed.

.
Actually, its non-refundable tax credit based on your tax liability, not what you owe. Makes a big difference for a lot of people.
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Apr 22, 2023
Knightshade
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Quote from thinh4u2 :
Actually, its non-refundable tax credit based on your tax liability, not what you owe. Makes a big difference for a lot of people.

Actually, no, it's against what you owe (before you get to the part of the 1040 that considers withholdings)

Which IS your tax liability.

Or, as I've described it repeatedly throughout these 90+ pages--- line 24 on your 1040.

Quote from Federal Form 1040 :
24. Add lines 22 and 23. This is your total tax
That line. That number. That's the only one that's relevant.

You get that much of the credit, to a max of $7500.


It's exhausting how hard people are working to make this more complicated than it really is.
Last edited by Knightshade April 21, 2023 at 08:50 PM.
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Apr 22, 2023
132 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
Apr 22, 2023
Dystien
Apr 22, 2023
132 Posts
Can somebody help me with a question on the federal credit?

I bought the long range Model Y 2 months ago. If I sell the vehicle now, can I still claim the credit on next years tax to get the $7500 credit?

The reason is because I want to get the Performance Model Y.

I understand that the limit is one per person per every 3 years so I would NOT claim the credit on the performance model.
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Apr 22, 2023
Knightshade
Apr 22, 2023
15,329 Posts
Quote from Dystien :
Can somebody help me with a question on the federal credit?

I bought the long range Model Y 2 months ago. If I sell the vehicle now, can I still claim the credit on next years tax to get the $7500 credit?

The reason is because I want to get the Performance Model Y.
Yes you can.


Quote from Dystien :
C
I understand that the limit is one per person per every 3 years so I would NOT claim the credit on the performance model.

That is not true at all.... there's no such limit on the new EV tax credit (there is on the USED EV tax credit)

You can 100% claim a second (third, fourth, however many EVs you buy) new EV credit- assuming you have enough tax liability to do so (again, line 24 on your 1040)
Last edited by Knightshade April 21, 2023 at 09:06 PM.
1
Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
Apr 22, 2023
phocean
Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Quote from Knightshade :
Actually, no, it's against what you owe (before you get to the part of the 1040 that considers withholdings)

Which IS your tax liability.

Or, as I've described it repeatedly throughout these 90+ pages--- line 24 on your 1040.



That line. That number. That's the only one that's relevant.

You get that much of the credit, to a max of $7500.


It's exhausting how hard people are working to make this more complicated than it really is.
It is also wrong...

Line 24 includes the refundable tax, which shall be considered after non refundable tax.

-- Assume your line 16 is $7500, you have refundable child tax credit is $1000, and you purchase a model Y. You actually going to get $1000 back. I.e., 7500 - 7500 - 1000.

-- but if you substract 1000 from line 16 and get your line 24 which will be 6500. This does not suggest you can only get 6500 back.

-- the correct way to look at it is line 16, and compare it with all your non refundable tax credit together. If line 16 is larger, you will get full credit back. It is not directly related to line 24.
Apr 22, 2023
132 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
Apr 22, 2023
Dystien
Apr 22, 2023
132 Posts
Quote from Knightshade :
Yes you can.





That is not true at all.... there's no such limit on the new EV tax credit (there is on the USED EV tax credit)

You can 100% claim a second (third, fourth, however many EVs you buy) new EV credit- assuming you have enough tax liability to do so (again, line 24 on your 1040)
Much appreciated with your response. Have a good one
1
Apr 22, 2023
882 Posts
Joined May 2008

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
Apr 22, 2023
phocean
Pro
Apr 22, 2023
1,018 Posts
Quote from CptSavAHo :
You're high AF.

Our HHI was just over your example, $512k. We had approximately 28% tax liability all in. My company pays 100% of insurance. We don't max an HSA, it's worthless since we don't have significant medical expenses. IRA is maxed, 401k is 3.5% (there's no point contributing beyond the match), we have 5013c in addition to 529. There's a MONUMNETAL difference between what we have left over and what we did when we made closer to $300k. We are literally buying a house a year right now with what's leftover. At $300k our income covered lifestyle and retirement and that was it.
HSA is the first to max out. Because it is double tax exempt. You don't use your hsa now, invest it for growth and pay future medical bills when you need because distribution is also tax free. This is better than 401k or roth. $7k per year for the couple, do it now and thank me later.

You mentioned IRA -- if you have mega backdoor 401k at the company, you can also choose to max it out. Inplan convert it to roth then distribution will be tax free. This is better than pretax 401k IMO. That is 132k per year for two persons including pretax 401k and company match. Let's say your companies match $12k. Then your contribution is $120k.
Last edited by phocean April 21, 2023 at 09:58 PM.
Apr 22, 2023
72 Posts
Joined Oct 2016
Apr 22, 2023
MichaelH5734
Apr 22, 2023
72 Posts
Quote from phocean :
A $500k income family will have less than $200k spendable income after ss, federal, state, local, medical insurance and maxed out 401k/roth/hsa/529. After mortgage it does not have much more than other $300k families. Yes they are well off. I am just trying to say, the threshold shall not be a hard cutoff ... a slow phasing out shall be the more appropriate policy.
If that's the case, money management is very poor. Just because you make more money, doesn't mean it makes you smarter!

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Apr 22, 2023
72 Posts
Joined Oct 2016
Apr 22, 2023
MichaelH5734
Apr 22, 2023
72 Posts
Quote from Gdirty5 :
What about those that have always made under the 300k threshold, but 2023 is looking good and it will be the first year they break 300k (joint).
Great on them! If not living beyond ones means, this car or even a big new truck, would be VERY easy to afford.

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