Author: GetTesla

  • The $7,500 federal tax credit is gone. Here’s what still helps in 2026.

    The $7,500 federal tax credit is gone. Here’s what still helps in 2026.

    If you’re shopping for a Tesla in July 2026, plan your budget without the $7,500 federal tax credit. It’s gone. Congress ended the New Clean Vehicle Credit, the Previously-Owned Clean Vehicle Credit, and the Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit for any vehicle acquired after September 30, 2025, according to the IRS’s own clean vehicle tax credit page. The cutoff came from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which Tesla’s incentives page notes was signed on July 4, 2025 and moved up the credit’s expiration by several years.

    There is one narrow exception. If you signed a binding purchase contract and made a payment on or before September 30, 2025, you may still be able to claim the credit on your tax return even if the car was delivered later, per IRS guidance. For anyone buying now, that window has closed, and no new federal purchase credit has replaced it.

    A smaller federal break: loan interest, not a purchase credit

    The same law created a consolation prize: a deduction for interest paid on new-vehicle loans. You can deduct up to $10,000 a year in car loan interest, according to IRS guidance on the new deduction. It applies to loans that originated after December 31, 2024, and it’s a deduction (it lowers your taxable income), not a credit that cuts your tax bill dollar for dollar, so the real-world savings are smaller than the number suggests.

    There are catches worth knowing before you count on it. Per Tesla’s own summary of the rule, the vehicle must be new, weigh under 14,000 pounds, and have its final assembly point in the United States — Tesla’s Model 3, Y, S, and X are built in Fremont, California, or Austin, Texas, so they generally qualify. The deduction also phases out for individuals with modified adjusted gross income over $100,000 (or $200,000 for joint filers), used vehicles and leases don’t count, and you’ll need to itemize using a new IRS schedule to claim it.

    The home charger credit already expired

    If you were also counting on a tax break for installing a home charger, that window has just closed. The federal Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit, which covered 30% of hardware and installation costs up to $1,000, was only available for chargers placed in service through June 30, 2026, according to the IRS page on the credit. As of this writing, that deadline has already passed, and the credit is no longer available for new installations.

    State incentives: what’s left is a patchwork, and it changes fast

    With federal purchase credits gone, state and utility programs matter more than ever, but they vary enormously by where you live, and several have run out of money mid-year. A few examples as of July 2026:

    California’s Clean Vehicle Rebate Project, once worth up to $7,500, stopped accepting new applications back in November 2023 and has not reopened, per the Clean Vehicle Rebate Project’s own site. Lower-income California buyers may still have options through separate programs like Clean Cars 4 All, but the broad rebate most Tesla buyers used is closed.

    Colorado still offers a state tax credit for new EVs: $750 for vehicles with an MSRP up to $80,000, with an added $2,500 for vehicles priced under $35,000, according to the Colorado Energy Office. Because most Tesla models list above $35,000, most Tesla buyers there would only qualify for the smaller $750 credit.

    Massachusetts runs the MOR-EV rebate program, offering $3,500 toward eligible new EVs, but only if the vehicle’s total MSRP stays under $55,000, per MOR-EV’s eligibility page. That cap rules out higher trims and pricier Tesla models.

    Illinois pays a $2,000 rebate for a new or used EV (up to $4,000 for lower-income applicants) on vehicles priced at $80,000 or less, but the state’s Illinois EPA rebate program closed its FY2026 application cycle on May 31, 2026, after funding ran out.

    New Jersey used to waive its entire 6.625% sales tax on EVs, but that exemption was phased out, and as of July 1, 2025 EVs are fully taxable there, according to the New Jersey Division of Taxation. Oregon’s popular Clean Vehicle Rebate Program has suspended new applications due to funding shortfalls and does not expect to reopen until later in 2026, per the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality.

    The pattern across states is the same: programs exist, but budgets are limited, rules change through the year, and many close their application windows once funds run out. Beyond direct rebates, some states and utilities also offer non-cash perks like carpool-lane access or reduced registration fees, and many utilities have their own rebates for home charging equipment, which Tesla’s incentives page directs buyers to check directly with their utility provider.

    What this means for your total cost of ownership

    The math on owning a Tesla has shifted. Where buyers in prior years could often plan around $7,500 in guaranteed federal savings, that’s no longer a safe assumption for a 2026 purchase. Instead, your actual savings now depend heavily on your state, your income, your loan terms, and whether a given program still has funding when you buy. Before you sign anything, check your state energy office’s website and your electric utility’s rebate page directly, since third-party estimates can lag behind program closures and funding changes. Factor in only the incentives you can confirm are currently active and that you’re eligible for, rather than the $7,500 figure many buyers still remember from prior years.

    This article is for general information only and is not tax advice. Incentive programs, eligibility rules, and funding availability change often — confirm current details with the IRS, your state’s energy office, and a qualified tax professional before making purchase decisions.

    Photo by Kindel Media.

  • Tesla Q2 2026 delivery numbers: what owners should know.

    Tesla Q2 2026 delivery numbers: what owners should know.

    Tesla delivered 480,126 vehicles worldwide in the second quarter of 2026, according to the company’s official production and delivery report published July 2. It’s the best second quarter in the company’s history and the first year-over-year delivery increase after two straight years of decline.

    Tesla produced 451,758 vehicles during the quarter and delivered more than it built, which means the company worked down roughly 28,000 vehicles of existing inventory rather than adding to it, according to Electrek’s analysis of the report. That reverses a buildup of about 50,000 excess vehicles that had accumulated in the first quarter of 2026.

    How this compares to expectations

    Deliveries came in about 74,000 vehicles above the average Wall Street forecast, which had called for roughly 406,000 deliveries, per Electrek’s pre-report consensus tracking. Even the most optimistic analyst estimates, in the 418,000-to-420,000 range, fell well short of the actual number. Deliveries were also up 25% from the same quarter last year, when Tesla delivered 384,122 vehicles — and this quarter’s total is the second-highest of any quarter in company history, trailing only the 497,099 vehicles delivered in the third quarter of 2025.

    The Model 3 sedan and Model Y SUV accounted for 467,762 of the quarter’s deliveries. The remaining 12,364 covers the Model S, Model X, Cybertruck, and Semi combined. Tesla doesn’t break out delivery figures by individual model beyond the Model 3/Y grouping in its quarterly reports.

    What’s behind the jump

    The comparison is notable because it isn’t riding the same tailwind as last year. Q2 2025 deliveries were inflated by a rush of buyers trying to close deals before the US federal EV tax credit and similar rebate programs in other countries expired, which made this year’s growth, arriving without that same incentive push, more of a demand signal than the raw percentage alone suggests.

    Coverage from Yahoo Finance points to a few concrete factors instead: Tesla introduced lower-priced variants of the Model 3 and Model Y earlier this year, expanded its Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software into additional European markets, and saw a bump in European demand tied to a spike in fuel costs during the quarter. None of that changes what you pay for a Tesla today, but it helps explain where the extra volume came from.

    Tesla shares actually fell after the report — down roughly 7.5% on the day, per the same Yahoo Finance coverage — a reminder that a single quarter’s delivery beat doesn’t map cleanly onto stock performance, and isn’t something that should factor into an ownership decision either way.

    Energy storage grew too

    Tesla’s energy storage business — the Powerwall and Megapack products — deployed 13.5 GWh of storage in the quarter, up 40% from 9.6 GWh a year earlier. That’s a smaller beat than the vehicle side: it came in slightly below the roughly 13.8 GWh analysts had expected.

    What it means if you own or are ordering a Tesla

    A quarter where Tesla delivers more cars than it builds is generally good news if you’re waiting on a new order: it suggests the company is working through existing inventory rather than letting a backlog grow, which historically correlates with more predictable delivery windows rather than longer ones. It doesn’t tell you anything directly about pricing or incentives — those are set separately, change independently of delivery reports, and are worth confirming directly on Tesla’s order pages before you buy.

    If the lower-priced Model 3 and Model Y variants mentioned above are part of what drove this quarter’s numbers, it’s a good sign that Tesla is actively working the price end of the lineup — worth checking current configurator pricing if a more affordable trim is what’s been holding you back from ordering.

    For current owners, strong delivery and energy deployment numbers are one input, among many, into the broader health of the company that built your car and, if you have one, your Powerwall or home charging setup. But a single quarter’s delivery count isn’t a signal about your vehicle’s warranty, service network, or software support, which are governed separately and haven’t changed as a result of this report.

    Tesla is scheduled to release full second-quarter financial results on July 22, 2026, which will include more detail on margins, energy business profitability, and forward guidance than the delivery report alone covers. Its next production-and-delivery report will cover the third quarter and typically arrives in the first few days of October.

    One more data point worth keeping in perspective: this quarter also beat Tesla’s previous Q2 record of 466,140 vehicles, set back in 2023, by roughly 14,000 units. Combined with the swing from a 50,000-vehicle inventory buildup in Q1 to a 28,000-vehicle drawdown in Q2, the numbers suggest Tesla matched production more closely to actual demand this quarter than it had in the recent past — which, if it holds, is generally the kind of trend that supports steadier delivery timelines for new orders rather than the swings buyers have sometimes seen around quarter-end pushes.

    Photo by Craig Adderley.