Tesla is working on a smaller, cheaper electric SUV

Skye Jacobs

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Rumor mill: Tesla is developing an all-new compact electric SUV that will be smaller, lighter, and cheaper than its current Model 3 and Model Y lineup, according to four people familiar with the matter. The project, which sources say is still in its early stages, involves a vehicle that is not a variant of Tesla's existing models but an entirely new design. In recent weeks, Tesla has reportedly approached suppliers to discuss manufacturing processes and specifications for key components of the compact SUV.

Three of the sources said the new model would be produced in China, while one added that Tesla also aims to expand production to the United States and Europe. Two sources said the vehicle would measure about 4.28 meters (14.0 feet) in length, making it significantly shorter than the Model Y, which is roughly 15.7 feet long.

Two people familiar with the project said Tesla is targeting a price well below its entry-level Model 3 sedan, which starts at about $34,000 in China and around $37,000 in the US. They added that the company plans to cut costs by using a smaller battery, which would reduce range to approximately 306 to 327 miles – similar to the Model Y's estimated range.

One source said the compact SUV is expected to use a single electric motor, rather than the dual-motor setups offered on many Tesla models today. The company is also targeting a weight of about 1.5 metric tons, compared with roughly two tons for the Model Y.

According to one person familiar with the project and a Tesla employee describing the company's current product philosophy, the vehicle could be designed to support both autonomous and human-driven operation. The employee declined to discuss any specific model but said Tesla's broader goal is to develop cars capable of operating driverlessly while still offering a conventional driving mode.

The person added that, even as Tesla pursues full autonomy, it expects many countries to remain slow to adopt or approve driverless vehicles. In their view, designing vehicles that can be built with or without traditional controls would allow Tesla to adapt to local regulations and demand while keeping its factories fully utilized.

The timing of any production launch for the compact SUV remains unclear, and sources said it is unlikely to begin this year. Reuters could not determine whether Tesla has formally approved production of the vehicle.

Tesla did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment about the new model. The company has previously launched development programs that were later delayed or stalled, including a Roadster sports car and a semi-truck unveiled in 2017, both of which have yet to reach mass production.

The compact SUV effort comes after Elon Musk scrapped a long-planned low-cost EV project in 2024, often referred to by investors as "Model 2," and shifted more of Tesla's focus toward robotaxis and humanoid robots.

A former Tesla manager told Reuters that introducing an all-new, cheaper conventional vehicle would mark a notable departure from Tesla's approach through mid-2025, when the company had dropped plans to mass-produce an entry-level model and instead positioned robotaxis as the primary way to reduce cost per mile for riders and operators.

After the Model 2 plans were abandoned, Musk and other executives spoke about "more affordable" EVs in general terms. When new offerings arrived last fall, they were stripped-down versions of the Model 3 and Model Y in Standard trims, with only modest price cuts that some investors viewed as insufficient to open a new mass market.

Analysts now expect Tesla's traditional EV sales to decline for a third consecutive year, even as the company advances its robotaxi strategy. Tesla currently operates a small number of robotaxis in Austin, Texas, many of which include human safety monitors in the front seat.

Taken together, the details suggest Tesla is testing how far it can move toward a cheaper, more flexible vehicle architecture that can support both human drivers and future autonomous services, without abandoning its long-term technology roadmap.

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I presume it will be their cybercab but with a steering wheel added. 300+ miles is probably acceptable for most drivers and most folk don't need the silly performance of their other cars but price is only one of Tesla's issues. The other 2 issues, at least outside of America, are people not wanting anything associated with Musk and people not wanting to buy anything associated with America. That's a difficult thing to solve.
 
I presume it will be their cybercab but with a steering wheel added. 300+ miles is probably acceptable for most drivers and most folk don't need the silly performance of their other cars but price is only one of Tesla's issues. The other 2 issues, at least outside of America, are people not wanting anything associated with Musk and people not wanting to buy anything associated with America. That's a difficult thing to solve.
300+ miles is most useful in the US, so that probably doesn't apply to a potential new Chinese car model. And the other issues you described apply mostly to Europe. In China for instance, Tesla sales fell by just under 5%, which is nothing like the 28% sales drop in Europe in 2025. Instead, sales have been increasing in China for the last 5 months YoY. Furthermore, the trend in Europe may be reversing in 2026: https://www.reuters.com/sustainabil...china-made-ev-sales-rise-87-march-2026-04-02/
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My EV's range is 320 miles and having just moved from Houston TX to Portland OR I no longer have range anxiety. I used a cool app called "A Better Route Planner" (ABRP) and it made the trek super easy. Google should buy it and integrate it in to Google Maps.
 
How about a small to midsized SUV, at a price competitive with vehicles like the Ford Escape and Edge?
 
In China for instance, Tesla sales fell by just under 5%, which is nothing like the 28% sales drop in Europe in 2025
Interesting but EV sales in China overall grew by 40% in 2024 and 20% in 2025. If Tesla's sales have fallen by 5% in such a market then that's a dramatic drop in market share.
 
"Three of the sources said the new model would be produced in China, while one added that Tesla also aims to expand production to the United States and Europe."

A fail project from Start...!
 
The other 2 issues, at least outside of America, are people not wanting anything associated with Musk and people not wanting to buy anything associated with America. That's a difficult thing to solve.
That would have been a difficult thing to solve, if it were to exist. You're projecting your wet dreams.
 
That would have been a difficult thing to solve, if it were to exist. You're projecting your wet dreams.
Yes, because the whole world loves America. They love the fact that a deranged lunatic is running America. They love that the lunatic is putting tariffs on everyone, ridiculing everyone, bullying everyone, threatening everyone, constantly whining and complaining about every little insignificant thing that pops into his deranged head, they love all the never-ending unwinnable wars America starts, etc. Yeah, everyone just LOVES America so much these days.
 
Yes, because the whole world loves America. They love the fact that a deranged lunatic is running America. They love that the lunatic is putting tariffs on everyone, ridiculing everyone, bullying everyone, threatening everyone, constantly whining and complaining about every little insignificant thing that pops into his deranged head, they love all the never-ending unwinnable wars America starts, etc. Yeah, everyone just LOVES America so much these days.
Calm down, buddy. We got what you don't like, but you're not "the whole world". You're just you.
 
Interesting but EV sales in China overall grew by 40% in 2024 and 20% in 2025. If Tesla's sales have fallen by 5% in such a market then that's a dramatic drop in market share.
You're comparing the whole market to one automaker. You need to compare automakers to other automakers. BYD is the perfect example considering it's another big player. Globally it grew a very small amount overall of by about 7%: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/02/byd...-december-but-lead-overall-sales-in-2025.html

So BYD grew from 4.3M sales to 4.6M, but 900,000 of those were new sales in overseas markets, suggesting a 13% decrease in domestic sales. Reporting says the reason for this is because of a price war in Chinese EVs. As a result, smaller EV makers grew a lot (at a cost) and larger players (like Tesla and BYD) just absorbed any impact: https://autonews.gasgoo.com/article...becomes-new-growth-engine-2007831963937550337
Nope. Thats the real reason: Fleet buyers and discount hunters drove Tesla's March "surge," not loyal customers. The brand is damaged, inventory is piling up, and real demand is down 20% in Europe — Tesla is surviving on bulk sales to rental companies, not winning back hearts.
Please cite the source that says fleet buyers or bulk sales had anything to do with a sales surge in March. I've been citing sources with every comment I make, so you should do the same. As for "discount hunters", that's kind of the point with Tesla. They are driving demand via lower cost offerings than competitors can provide. And nobody said anything about "winning back hearts" lol, we are talking about capitalism.
 
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All the hatred on Musk...I bet if he dumped Trump/Maga/X-Twitter and went all leftist, those that hate him would love him again...like they did before he went Maga. ;)
 
Calm down, buddy. We got what you don't like, but you're not "the whole world". You're just you.
I promise you, that's a fairly accurate description of how the UK views America - keep in mind the UK is (was) America's closest ally. The opinions across Europe are probably far worse. In the Gulf, where they've been subject to daily missile attacks because of your attack on Iran, they wonder what the hell you're up to. In the far east their they're now running into oil shortages because of the war and are having to send their own diplomats to deal with Iran rather than trust American diplomacy. Canada ....

It just goes on. To most of the world your current administration just appears incompetent at best and downright criminal the rest of the time. And your foreign policy is just plain ludicrous and very likely illegal.
 
I presume it will be their cybercab but with a steering wheel added. 300+ miles is probably acceptable for most drivers and most folk don't need the silly performance of their other cars but price is only one of Tesla's issues. The other 2 issues, at least outside of America, are people not wanting anything associated with Musk and people not wanting to buy anything associated with America. That's a difficult thing to solve.

The cybercab is a silly idea. There is no way in Hell most municipalities would even entertain a steering-wheel-less car on the roads. Steering wheel, brake pedal and accelerator as well as gear shifter and display are mandatory. Rear backup camera is mandatory.

I see nothing wrong with a Model 3 or Model Y Coupe that drops the rear entertainment display to cut costs to meet the "low cost" ($30,000) target.

Question: Who charges Robotaxis when they run low on power?
 
I promise you, that's a fairly accurate description of how the UK views America - keep in mind the UK is (was) America's closest ally. The opinions across Europe are probably far worse. In the Gulf, where they've been subject to daily missile attacks because of your attack on Iran, they wonder what the hell you're up to. In the far east their they're now running into oil shortages because of the war and are having to send their own diplomats to deal with Iran rather than trust American diplomacy. Canada ....

It just goes on. To most of the world your current administration just appears incompetent at best and downright criminal the rest of the time. And your foreign policy is just plain ludicrous and very likely illegal.
Eh, the USA is like Elon musk, you either hate em or you love em. there’s not an in between
 
The cybercab is a silly idea. There is no way in Hell most municipalities would even entertain a steering-wheel-less car on the roads.
Which is why they're probably turning the chassis into a smaller, cheaper vehicle with a steering wheel that people can drive.

Question: Who charges Robotaxis when they run low on power?
I don't that that's the difficult part. They know their range and the distance the fare wants to travel so they just ensure they go to an automatic plug in point before they reach zero. The difficult part is getting people to step in them.
 
I presume it will be their cybercab but with a steering wheel added. 300+ miles is probably acceptable for most drivers and most folk don't need the silly performance of their other cars but price is only one of Tesla's issues. The other 2 issues, at least outside of America, are people not wanting anything associated with Musk and people not wanting to buy anything associated with America. That's a difficult thing to solve.
Outside the liberal mind rot bubble, most people are smart enough to do what’s best for them. But those who want to buy products from the murderous CCP regime still have the freedom to
 
Outside the liberal mind rot bubble, most people are smart enough to do what’s best for them. But those who want to buy products from the murderous CCP regime still have the freedom to
I'm guessing most of the stuff you own comes from China but you simply draw the line at cars? I'm not saying the CCP are great but murderous is a bit of a stretch especially in comparison to the US that in 2026 has :

* Kidnapped Venezuela's president and wife and taken their oil
* Killed the ruler and religious leader of Iran
* Effectively declared war on Greenland, Denmark, Canada, Cuba and Iran
* Actively declared war on Iran and killed 1200 civilians including 170 nursery school children on the first day
* Destroyed 22 hospitals in Iran
* Destroyed 600 schools in Iran
* Destroyed 30-50 universities in Iran
* Shut down 20% of the world's oil supply
* Got well on the way to causing a global recession

Keep in mind we're only at the start of April!.
 
Yes, because the whole world loves America. They love the fact that a deranged lunatic is running America. They love that the lunatic is putting tariffs on everyone, ridiculing everyone, bullying everyone, threatening everyone, constantly whining and complaining about every little insignificant thing that pops into his deranged head, they love all the never-ending unwinnable wars America starts, etc. Yeah, everyone just LOVES America so much these days.

Here it is.... didn't take long for the TDS crowd to show up!
What does any of that have to do withTesla? People aren’t buying SUVs to make a geopolitical statement...they’re buying based on range, price, tech, and reliability. Teslas sell globally because of the product, not because someone’s cheering for U.S. politics whether you like them or not.

If you’ve got something to say about the vehicle, say it. Otherwise you’re just yelling into the void and showing your political trauma.
 
I expect a Chinese car manufacturer will have bought the remains of Tesla long before this last-gasp sees the light of day.
 
What does any of that have to do withTesla? People aren’t buying SUVs to make a geopolitical statement...they’re buying based on range, price, tech, and reliability.
When you buy a vehicle, you're buying a brand and that reflects back on you. If someone buys a Ferrari then they're telling people they probably a little too much money and want to appear fast. When people buy a Rolls Royce then they're telling people they've made it in life and that they want to enjoy the better things. A few years ago, when someone bought a Tesla, it suggested they wanted to be a part of the future and wanted to leave the old ways behind. Unfortunately now it suggests you align with a leader who's stuck in 1939 and with a country that wants to go back to the great depression.

I'm just trying to explain one of the reasons why Tesla market share fell from 80% in 2019 to a bit over 40% in 2025.
 
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