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Home»Business & Economy»Elon Musk’s cheap Teslas are the wrong kind of cheap
Business & Economy

Elon Musk’s cheap Teslas are the wrong kind of cheap

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auOctober 8, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Elon Musk’s cheap Teslas are the wrong kind of cheap
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This has not been a vintage year for Tesla product launches.

This Northern hemisphere summer, it launched a long-delayed robotaxi service that came with a free human. Now, it has unveiled two long-awaited cheaper electric vehicles that are most definitely not the game-changers once promised.

But are they enough to do the job? It depends on what that job is.

The new Tesla models released this week have had a number of features removed or downgraded.

The new Tesla models released this week have had a number of features removed or downgraded.Credit: Bloomberg

If the job is to turn around Tesla’s EV sales, these “standard” iterations of the Models Y and 3 aren’t likely to be up to the task. Yes, they are cheaper than the prior base models before subsidies. But the cuts of around $US5,000 ($7600) are less than the lost $US7,500 electric car tax credit for US consumers, and leaves them closer to $US40,000 than $US30,000.

More importantly, the price cuts aren’t a reflection of some game-changing manufacturing process. That plan was shoved aside in favour of boosting utilisation on Tesla’s existing assembly lines. Instead, Tesla’s famously spare interiors will get sparer in these versions, as a number of features are removed or downgraded: shorter range, fewer speakers and touchscreens, textile seats, manual steering, fewer colour choices and so on.

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There’s nothing wrong per se with a less whizz-bang trim on a vehicle aimed at enticing more customers. That’s especially so when the political party your chief executive backed has yanked away the tax credit buoying sales and rivals are releasing a range of competing EVs into a domestic market poised to shrink.

The US needs cheaper vehicles. But this is Tesla, pioneer of EVs, now releasing lower-content versions of models that debuted before the pandemic.

Contrast that with Ford Motor’s project to reimagine the EV assembly line for a brand-new $US30,000 truck — execution pending, of course — or China’s ongoing redefinition of what’s possible. Even Tesla’s nomenclature, “standard”, sounds half-hearted for the company that forced terms like “gigafactory” and “robotaxi” into the vernacular.

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