Tesla Semi is finally going into production, and early drivers are already sold

Skye Jacobs

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First look: Tesla's long-delayed electric Semi is preparing to enter mass production just as much of the US trucking industry is cooling on battery power. Yet in California's ports and on nearby freight corridors, some of the drivers and fleet owners who have actually spent time behind the wheel say the truck is changing their view of what a heavy-duty EV can do.

For Dakota Shearer, a driver with IMC Logistics, that shift began on a tight bend outside Sparks, Nevada. He took a wrong turn hauling a 40-foot trailer and found himself on a curve too narrow to complete. In a conventional rig, he would have had to climb in and out of the cab to check his position as he reversed out. In the Tesla Semi, he sat in the middle of the cab, with no right-side blind spot and screens giving a full view around the tractor-trailer. He backed out in one attempt. "It's like I'd never done it in the first place," he told The Wall Street Journal, adding that the experience convinced him the truck's technology "makes a big difference."

Shearer is part of a small group of US truckers who have driven pilot Semis in California. The vehicle, first touted nearly a decade ago as Tesla's entry into heavy-duty trucking, is now scheduled to move from pilots to mass production this summer at the company's Nevada Gigafactory, after years of delays.

According to a report from Tigress Financial Partners, Tesla is expected to deliver between 5,000 and 15,000 Semis in 2026, with annual output eventually ramping to 50,000 trucks.

The move comes just after the Trump administration rolled back federal EV subsidies and eased fuel-economy rules, softening demand for battery-powered vehicles in general. At the same time, trucking companies are wrestling with a prolonged freight downturn, higher labor costs, and tariff-driven trade uncertainty.

Those pressures have made fleets cautious about any capital spending, and especially about trucks that typically cost around three times as much as diesel models, take hours to charge, and often top out at about 200 miles of range.

California, which has pushed hardest to get diesel rigs out of its ports, has also dialed back. Anticipating opposition from Washington, state regulators last year withdrew a mandate that would have required carriers to buy zero-emission trucks. The policy retreat coincided with the collapse of Nikola, a high-profile maker of hydrogen fuel-cell and battery-electric trucks that filed for bankruptcy in early 2025, leaving operators with vehicles that are expensive to refuel and harder to support.

Now, the Semi is arriving with two selling points that matter to fleets: range and duty cycle. Tesla says the truck can travel up to 500 miles on a single charge, with another variant rated at 325 miles. For King Fio Trucking in Long Beach, California, those numbers translate directly into additional routes.

The company already runs 11 battery-electric trucks from Volvo and Nikola but limits them to short drayage runs because they offer roughly 225 miles of range. By contrast, King Fio's co-founder and CEO, Jennie Abarca, says the Semi's 500-mile rating would allow two to three round trips a day from Long Beach to warehouses in the Inland Empire, or a round trip to Las Vegas, on one charge. She has placed orders for 20 Semis and hopes eventually to replace all 27 of the company's diesel trucks.

Tesla has not publicly disclosed the Semi's sticker price and did not respond to requests for comment. Buyers are bound by nondisclosure agreements.

People familiar with orders say the trucks are priced under $300,000, or roughly double the cost of a comparable diesel rig, and around $100,000 less than some competing battery-electric trucks.

Proponents point to lower maintenance as a counterweight: battery-electric powertrains have fewer moving parts and do not require the same regular servicing as diesel engines. At Big F Transport in Wilmington, California, five mechanics maintain more than 40 diesel rigs and a fleet of chassis. The company's vice president of operations, Geovanny Melendez, who saw the Semi at a recent ride-and-drive near the Port of Long Beach, estimates that a fully electric fleet would need only one mechanic to handle the chassis.

Others urge caution. Robert Braswell, executive director of the American Trucking Associations' Technology & Maintenance Council, notes that high-voltage systems will require technicians with skills closer to those of journeyman electricians than to those of traditional diesel mechanics.

Charging infrastructure is another constraint. Public EV chargers have expanded, but most lack the power levels needed for long-haul Class 8 operations. Tesla has published a map of planned high-power charging sites for Semis along freight corridors in California, Texas, the Pacific Northwest, and the Southeast, with openings expected to begin this summer, but those stations do not yet exist at scale.

On the road, the truck's behavior under load may matter more than any spreadsheet. During IMC's monthlong pilot in California, Shearer hauled a 25,000-pound load of dog food over a mountain pass and said the Semi pulled as if the cargo "wasn't even there." He singled out smooth acceleration as a standout feature, along with something more cosmetic: the reaction from other drivers.

Where kids once pumped their arms to get a horn blast from a passing truck, he said, they now mostly reach for their phones, aiming cameras at an unfamiliar electric rig that is about to test whether heavy-duty trucking is ready for its next platform shift.

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Seems late to the party with autonomous semis starting real routes on public roads.
Naw, that's still years off, and will start will the popular/easy routes.

There will be a need for truckers for many years yet as autonomous tech matures.
 
Seems that these are all short haul routes, which will be interesting to see, especially outside of California, where fossil fuels are punished with a vengeance. I do know that the ev school bus push has been a total bust in the rest of the country. One school district said they were facing operating costs of about $3.30 a mile vs something like $ 0.47 per mile for their diesel fleet. Electricity cost was a big factor, along with range.
 
I follow this trucker youtuber from Germany. He is driving daily EV trucks (different European models) and according to him, just the price for fuel vs price for charging saves around 100k per year. With better acceleration, going uphill without slowing down. And much easier maintenance. The key is of course well and dense network of high powered charging stations.
 
And...where does all of the electricity come from to charge them up?
Coal, wind, solar, nuclear. And CA doesn't have and isn't building up
their grid either.
 
I follow this trucker youtuber from Germany. He is driving daily EV trucks (different European models) and according to him, just the price for fuel vs price for charging saves around 100k per year. With better acceleration, going uphill without slowing down. And much easier maintenance. The key is of course well and dense network of high powered charging stations.
And enough electricity, which Germany f**d up when they closed all of their nuclear power plants.
 
And...where does all of the electricity come from to charge them up?
Coal, wind, solar, nuclear. And CA doesn't have and isn't building up
their grid either.
It would be interesting to see electricity consumption vs production at peak charging times when EVs are 80%+ of all the cars on the road. Something tells me it won't be possible without reliable ways to make electricity that does not depend on sources that are not always available.
 
I thought:
- AI data centers were using up all the power in the USA?
- LNG powered engines were the future for now using carbon negative LNG (such as from clean energy fuels that use animal manure at farms to capture methane) until the cost of electric is lower and the tech is more matured. And if there isn't enough carbon negative LNG, normal LNG could be used.
- Cameras to see the rear could be added to any truck.

I am not saying electric is a bad idea, I just don't trust anything where Elon Musk is the CEO.
 
Naw, that's still years off, and will start will the popular/easy routes.

There will be a need for truckers for many years yet as autonomous tech matures.
It's not years off, there are multiple companies running long haul routes with fully autonomous semis.

For example: Aurora Innovation from Fort Worth to Phoenix.

It will be many years until all truckers are replaced but it has already started.
 
It's not years off, there are multiple companies running long haul routes with fully autonomous semis.

For example: Aurora Innovation from Fort Worth to Phoenix.

It will be many years until all truckers are replaced but it has already started.

......Ummm, then it seems like we do agree; truckers will be needed for many years yet.
I wasn't saying there aren't autonomous semi's, but that those routes are still years off to fully replace truckers...
 
It would be interesting to see electricity consumption vs production at peak charging times when EVs are 80%+ of all the cars on the road. Something tells me it won't be possible without reliable ways to make electricity that does not depend on sources that are not always available.
Do some research for instance, have a look at this - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306261913004832
For example, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory states that current US power plants can supply electricity adequate to charge 73% of vehicles if replaced with PHEVs. PHEV charging consumption is an additional demand that may be twice as much as the average household load, and will increase the peak load, stressing the system equipment (e.g. transformers) [9]. Fig. 2 shows the plots of historical data of a typical residential load profile that includes manually added typical load caused by PHEV consumption under quick charging strategy in summer, TOU pricing for a demand response program, and Photovoltaic (PV) generation. This figure shows a case in which a PHEV user charges the vehicle when he or she arrives at home to make sure that it is fully charged and ready for next day travel. It is noted that the main PHEV charging duration overlaps with on-peak hours, in which the grid price is high under the TOU pricing. Moreover, considering such significant increase in peak demand under price-based demand response program, scheduling of PHEV charging becomes more critical for both the residential customers and the utility companies. The residential customers would like to reduce their monthly bill, and the utility companies would like to shift the peak by defining the optimum pricing policies. This challenge needs to be analyzed carefully, since it becomes a two-side game in which it will be desirable for both to gain maximum benefits.
Pay close attention the part that statets -
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory states that current US power plants can supply electricity adequate to charge 73% of vehicles if replaced with PHEVs.

This page is dated 2013 already and you think that the grid and the power generation capability of present times won't be able to handle the load?

"The avalanche has started. It's too late for the pebbles to vote." Kosh - Babylon 5.
 
And enough electricity, which Germany f**d up when they closed all of their nuclear power plants.

Well, my comment was mostly regarding the two key advantage an EV truck has:

- better driving comfort (acceleration, no noise, simple maintenance)

- Economical side of it. yes, charging rates went up, but the charging network is still working properly and as said, saves around 100'00 Euros per year compared to same truck class using an ICE engine (mostly diesel). These are data from the guy working in transport company that has both type of trucks, and is rapidly moving to EV. The recently did international transport from Germany to Turkey with great success.
 
Batteries will get smaller, safer, cheaper and more powerful in the very near future and everything will change.
 
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