pricedm
Well-known member
- First Name
- Adam
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2022
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 940
- Reaction score
- 1,861
- Location
- Denver, Colorado, USA
- Vehicles
- 2026 Tesla Model Y LR. 2025 Cybertruck AWD. 2023 MY and 2018 M3: retired
- Occupation
- IT
The delta is more than $80k.I don't really understand how there could be so many people who can afford to pay $80K for a truck but not $100K. If $20K breaks you you really can't afford it. So I am doubting that offering the non-FS is really going to unlock a lot of new buyers. Price will have to drop a lot more for that and Tesla will have to strip out a lot more than trim to make that happen (like four wheel steer and drive by wire).
For the Colorado buyer this year of a $80k Model X, the after tax-break price, for those who qualify--is $67,500.
If a non-FS with Core wheels and AS tires is $80,000, I have $32,500 left over to buy the "all road" rim/tire combo.
We have no idea about feature changes between FS and non-FS, other than guessing all "included with Foundation series" are subtracted and a price of $80,000 is achieved.
FSD is not physically attached so does not affect the $80k federal (and many/most state) tax credit vehicle price ceiling.
Buy now for guaranteed fun. Delay for a lower price/lower spec Cybertruck.
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