https://www.tesla.com/modely/design#overview
Tesla Model Y
Dual Motor
All-Wheel Drive
Range: 330mi
Top Speed: 135 mph
0-60 mph: 4.8 seconds
Qualify for $7500 Federal Tax Credit with below income cap:
Adjusted Gross Income Limitations
$300,000 for married couples filing jointly
$225,000 for heads of households
$150,000 for all other filers
QA Note: List Price Drop
Rear-Wheel Drive is $43,990
Dual Motor AWD Long Range is $48,490 Now $48,990
Extra Discount for already built ones, change to your zip code and check
https://www.tesla.com/inventory/n...&range=100
Please use
the referral link [ts.la] when you purchase one. Thank you!
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2,286 Comments
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These things come new with steering wheels that fall off, brake pads not installed, etc.
How can Ford loses 60K per EV if the EV itself is less than 60k?
My mistake Q1 2023 Ford was losing 60k per EV sold.
Goggle it yourself. Here's the first 3 that popped up for me.
https://www.carscoops.c
https://www.fool.com/investing/20...on-each-e/
https://www.thestreet.c
Q2 2023 Ford is losing 32k Per EV sold
https://fordauthority.c
https://www.carscoops.c
https://www.auto123.com/en/news/f...000/70571/
Ah, but if that person already has millions invested and spends a lot, $100K in a bank account is more reasonable than it may seem.
IMO, Trader Joe's > Costco/BJs, without paying an annual fee. Not bashing either though, to be clear.
You didn't really answer the question... if the amount on the receipt vastly exceeds your entire net worth, would you feel bad? The point is you shouldn't.
But I doubt people that wealthy walk around cashing rewards check. most wealthy get there by creating more income not saving pennies. Costco is a regula and rich ppl place not wealthy shoppers place
If the day ever comes that some dingbat politicians go California on us and force us to buy electric cars, I'll probably just shift to leasing them and beat the everliving 💩 out of them. I'm set with glorified golf carts.
lastly, read some of the comments from the EV cult here such as "my smart boomer friends love EVs, the rest don't buy them" this type of conceited, stuck up. snobbish attitude doesn't exactly excite me to join the battery cult.
So far only once it has happened that she didn't plan well and she was running low on juice and then the car automatically directed it to the nearest supercharger and she sat there 20 mins watching Netflix while it was getting refilled.
Ah, but if that person already has millions invested and spends a lot, $100K in a bank account is more reasonable than it may seem.
IMO, Trader Joe's > Costco/BJs, without paying an annual fee. Not bashing either though, to be clear.
You didn't really answer the question... if the amount on the receipt vastly exceeds your entire net worth, would you feel bad? The point is you shouldn't.
To you it may but not to me - not in this high interest rate environment - it should be generating $14 in interest per-day including the weekends. So it depends upon what interest their checking account is paying. I am doing some new construction and have made several payments that are over $100K and in each case, the money is sitting in a very high yield account and it is wire transfers. So between wire transfers and credit card rewards, I don't need $100K in a low yield account.
> Costco/BJs, without paying an annual fee.
I am a executive member at Costco. That generates additional 2% on everything I buy - that pays me some pocket change after reimbursing me for the fees. People always get hung up on the wrong thing - e.g. would you pay your taxes using a credit card when the processing fee is 1.87% - most people won't. But I always use that service and charge it to card giving me 2%. So yeah - 1.87% sounds bad but when you are making more than that in credit card rewards, who cares.
> You didn't really answer the question... if the amount on the receipt vastly exceeds your entire net worth, would you feel bad? The point is you shouldn't.
I wouldn't - it is not a rat race. Life is all having fun and making choices that you want to make versus copying others like an Ape. And if the amount vastly exceeds yours, you can't even copy!
I asked my insurance company, State Farm, and the full coverage for model X is 3600/yr.
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I really don't understand why so many people don't get that...
Given a two premium brands at the same price range, the Tesla will cost an average of 25% more to insure.
Google.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNSEpTr
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For example, say you're married and make a combined $120k. Your tax liability is about $11k-
If you had $12k withheld for the year and didn't buy an EV, you would get a $1k refund. If you buy the EV, you get an $8500 refund.
If you only had $10k withheld and didn't buy an EV, you'd have a $1k tax bill. If you bought an EV, you'd have a $6500 refund.
Most people who can even consider buying a $40k+ car will have enough tax liability to get the full $7500 benefit.
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