Category: Guides

  • What happens between your Tesla order and delivery day.

    What happens between your Tesla order and delivery day.

    Placing a Tesla order is the easy part. Here’s what actually happens in the weeks after, based on Tesla’s own delivery guidance.

    Right after you order

    Download the Tesla app right away — Tesla uses it to confirm your registration and delivery location, both of which need to be set before your order can move forward. This is also where you submit trade-in details and financing information if you’re using either.

    VIN assignment

    Once a specific vehicle is built and assigned to your order, you’ll get a VIN (vehicle identification number) along with an estimate of when it will arrive at your delivery location. At that point, you need to upload proof of insurance in the app and submit final payment before the car can be handed over.

    Scheduling your appointment

    When your vehicle is confirmed available, Tesla sends an SMS letting you know it’s assigned, followed within a few days by a message with a link to schedule your delivery appointment. You can reschedule through the app’s Scheduling tab — but not within 48 hours of the appointment, so build in some buffer if your plans are still in flux. Any outstanding paperwork typically becomes available in the app within 24 hours of your scheduled appointment, so it’s worth checking the day before rather than assuming everything is already signed.

    Delivery day itself

    At most delivery locations, you check in, complete payment acceptance in the app, and unlock the car with your phone instead of a physical key. If you live more than 220 miles from a delivery location, Tesla also offers carrier delivery to your home for a fee, according to its delivery day support page.

    Timelines between VIN assignment and delivery vary by location, configuration, and how busy the quarter is — the Tesla app is the most current source for your specific estimate, and it’s normal for that estimate to shift as your date approaches. Once you have a firm delivery window, it’s worth reviewing what to check at pickup before you sign off.

    Photo by AI25.Studio Studio.

  • Tesla now sells a six-seat Model Y.

    Tesla now sells a six-seat Model Y.

    Tesla has added a longer, three-row version of the Model Y to its US lineup. The Model Y L is now configurable online in the US and Puerto Rico, arriving first as a “Launch Series” priced at $61,990, according to Electrek.

    That makes it the most expensive Model Y you can buy today — more than the Performance trim’s $57,990 and well above the base rear-wheel-drive Model Y’s $39,990, per the same report.

    What’s different

    The Model Y L stretches the wheelbase by about 150mm (5.9 inches) and adds roughly 180mm (7 inches) to overall length — room Tesla uses for a genuine third row, rather than the cramped jump seats the standard Model Y introduced earlier this year. Seating is arranged 2+2+2: the second row gets heated, ventilated captain’s chairs with powered armrests and one-touch fold, and the third row gets heated, power-reclining seats with child-seat anchors.

    Other changes include 89 cubic feet of total cargo space, adaptive damping, staggered tires, upgraded acoustic glass, a 19-speaker audio system, a second-row 8-inch touchscreen, and 50W cooled wireless charging pads. Tesla rates the Model Y L at 325 miles of EPA-estimated range with all-wheel drive and a 4.4-second 0–60 mph time — quicker, and with more range, than most three-row electric SUVs it competes against.

    Should you buy the L instead of a regular Model Y?

    If you don’t regularly carry more than five people, the standard Model Y remains the cheaper, simpler choice — you’re not paying roughly $22,000 more for space you won’t use. The Model Y L makes sense specifically for buyers who need to seat six adults or older kids comfortably on a regular basis, something the standard Model Y’s third row was never really built for.

    It’s also worth knowing before you order: the Model Y L ships with FSD Supervised software included at launch. Trims and included features can change, so confirm current pricing and specs on Tesla’s own configurator before you place an order.

    Photo by Chenxi Yan.

  • What Does It Cost to Insure a Tesla in 2026?

    What Does It Cost to Insure a Tesla in 2026?

    Insuring a Tesla generally costs more than insuring the average new vehicle, and more than insuring the average electric vehicle from another brand. How much more depends heavily on which model you drive, where you live, and your own driving record — but a few data points can help you set expectations before you start shopping for quotes.

    As of June 2026, Insurance.com put full-coverage premiums at roughly $3,871 a year ($323/month) for a Tesla Model 3 and $3,836 a year ($320/month) for a Model Y. A separate analysis from Insurify, last updated July 2, 2026 and based on real-time quotes across its network of insurance partners, put the average across all Tesla models closer to $268/month for full coverage — a reminder that quoted averages vary by data source, driver profile, and methodology, so treat any single number as a ballpark rather than a quote. A third estimate from ValuePenguin, using a hypothetical 30-year-old driver with good credit in Texas as of June 30, 2026, priced the Model Y around $255/month and the Model 3 around $282/month full coverage.

    Whichever source you check, Teslas tend to cost more to insure than the typical new car. Insurance.com’s data put the overall Tesla average at about $4,512 a year, roughly 48% above its cited national average of $3,037 a year across all vehicles. That gap isn’t unique to Tesla: a broader Insurify report found electric vehicles overall cost about 42% more to insure than gas-powered cars ($3,159 vs. $2,218 a year), though that gap narrows to roughly 18% when comparing only 2024-model-year-or-newer vehicles, as safety tech becomes more standardized across the industry.

    A few factors specifically push Tesla premiums higher. Repair costs are a big one: collision-repair estimates cited by Insurance.com, drawing on Southern California body-shop data, averaged $3,914 for a Tesla versus $1,629 for a Honda. Insurers point to a few reasons for this: Tesla’s aluminum unibody construction often requires replacing larger panels rather than patching them, driver-assist sensors need recalibration after even minor collisions, and parts sourcing can be limited compared with higher-volume brands. Vehicle price also matters — a higher sticker price generally means a higher cost to replace or repair the car, which insurers factor into premiums. Your own driver profile (age, driving record, credit-based insurance score where allowed, and location) still plays the largest role in what you personally pay, the same as it would for any other vehicle.

    Tesla also sells its own policy, Tesla Insurance, directly through the Tesla app in 15 states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Virginia. Outside California, Tesla’s Real-Time Insurance product prices coverage using your car’s own data rather than a separate tracking device. Drivers start with an assumed Safety Score of 90, which is recalculated monthly from the prior 30 days of driving and factors in behaviors like hard braking, speeding, and following distance, along with how much of your driving uses FSD (Supervised). Tesla states that premiums can adjust immediately when you change coverage, address, or drivers; monthly as your Safety Score, mileage, or FSD usage changes; and at renewal. California policyholders get a different Tesla Insurance product that doesn’t use Safety Score to set price, though they can opt in to see their score for informational purposes.

    Because quotes vary so much by insurer, state, and driver history, the practical step is to compare quotes from several carriers — including Tesla’s own program if it’s offered where you live — rather than relying on any published average as your expected price. Ask each insurer specifically how they treat EV repair costs and driver-assistance features, since that’s often where Tesla quotes diverge most from insurer to insurer.

    Photo by Mikhail Nilov.

  • Home Charging vs. Supercharging: What a Tesla Actually Costs to Charge

    Home Charging vs. Supercharging: What a Tesla Actually Costs to Charge

    The honest answer is: it depends on where you live, which Tesla you drive, and whether you’re charging at home or on a road trip. But the math is straightforward once you have three numbers — your electricity rate, your car’s efficiency, and Tesla’s Supercharger pricing — so here’s how to run it yourself.

    Home charging cost starts with your local electricity rate. The national average price U.S. households paid for residential electricity was 18.83 cents per kilowatt-hour as of April 2026, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That’s a national blended average — rates run lower in parts of the Midwest and South and considerably higher in California, the Northeast, and Hawaii — so pull up your own utility bill for a more accurate number.

    Next is how efficiently your Tesla uses that electricity. Based on EPA testing, a Model 3 consumes about 256 Wh per mile (3.9 miles per kWh), while a Model Y Long Range AWD uses about 288 Wh per mile (3.5 miles per kWh) — the Model Y’s larger, less aerodynamic body draws more power per mile than the smaller Model 3. Performance trims and larger wheel options use somewhat more energy per mile.

    Multiply those two numbers together and you get cost per mile. For a Model 3 at the national average rate: 0.256 kWh/mile × $0.1883/kWh is about 4.8 cents per mile, or roughly $4.82 to drive 100 miles. For a Model Y Long Range: 0.288 × $0.1883 is about 5.4 cents per mile, or roughly $5.42 per 100 miles. Swap in your own utility rate and your car’s actual efficiency (shown on the trip screen) to get your own number.

    Supercharger pricing works differently, and Tesla doesn’t publish one flat national rate. Tesla bills most Supercharger sessions by the kWh, but the company uses “live pricing” at many stations, adjusting the rate in real time based on how busy the site is — plug in during a quiet stretch and you pay less; arrive when every stall is full and the price rises to spread out demand. Tesla also layers on a separate per-minute “congestion fee” if you leave your car plugged in after it finishes charging, which is a parking penalty, not a charging cost.

    Because pricing is dynamic and location-specific, there’s no single “Supercharger rate” to quote. As a representative range, InsideEVs has cited MotorTrend estimates putting typical Supercharger pricing between roughly 25 and 50 cents per kWh — call it double to triple the national home-charging average, though your local price could land outside that range. Using that range, a Model 3 would cost roughly $6.40 to $12.80 to Supercharge 100 miles’ worth of energy, and a Model Y Long Range roughly $7.20 to $14.40 — noticeably more than charging at home, even at the low end.

    Scale that to a typical month. An owner driving around 1,000 miles would spend roughly $48 to $54 charging a Model Y exclusively at home, versus roughly $72 to $144 doing all of that charging at Superchargers. Most owners land somewhere in between: home charging for daily driving, Supercharging occasionally for longer trips.

    There’s one more cost to factor in if you’re charging at home: installing a Level 2 charging station. A dedicated 240-volt home charger — including the hardware and an electrician’s labor to run the circuit — typically costs between roughly $750 and $2,600, depending on how far your electrical panel is from where you park and whether the panel needs upgrading. It’s a one-time expense, and for most owners the savings from home charging pay it back within a year or two.

    The takeaway: home charging is consistently the cheaper option, often by half or more, because you’re paying your utility’s flat residential rate instead of a premium, demand-based network rate. Superchargers remain useful — and often still cheaper than gasoline — for road trips or when home charging isn’t available, but for everyday driving, plugging in overnight at home is where the real savings are.

    Photo by Rathaphon Nanthapreecha.

  • Model Y vs. Model X: Which Fits Your Family

    Model Y vs. Model X: Which Fits Your Family

    Model Y and Model X are both Tesla SUVs, but as of July 2026 they are not competing on equal footing. Tesla ended Model X production in spring 2026, while it keeps expanding the Model Y lineup, including a new six-seat long-wheelbase version. Here is how the two compare for a family shopping today.

    Model Y starts at $41,630 for the Standard rear-wheel-drive trim, including destination and order fees, and runs up to about $59,000 for the Performance trim, according to Kelley Blue Book’s 2026 spec sheet. Tesla just added a longer six-seat version called the Model Y L, which launched in the US on July 2, 2026 at $61,990. Model X is a different story. Tesla stopped building new Model X vehicles in spring 2026 and closed custom orders, so buyers can only choose from shrinking leftover inventory. Remaining units got a $15,000 price increase in April 2026, and InsideEVs reported Plaid inventory units priced near $129,900, with other remaining units starting around $111,000. If you want a new Tesla SUV you can actually order today, that effectively means Model Y.

    Seating is where the two vehicles diverge most. The standard Model Y seats five, with a tight optional third row that pushes capacity to seven. The new Model Y L addresses that complaint with a 2+2+2, six-seat layout built on a 5.9-inch-longer wheelbase, adding heated captain’s chairs and its own touchscreen for second-row passengers. Model X offers five, six, or seven-passenger configurations across three rows, and reviewers generally find its third row roomier and easier to reach than the standard Model Y’s, partly because of its rear falcon-wing doors, which swing up rather than out and can make loading car seats easier in tight garages or parking spots, though they close more slowly than a conventional door.

    On range, Model Y trims run from 321 miles (Standard) up to 357 miles (Premium RWD), with the Performance trim rated at 306 miles and the new Model Y L rated at 325 miles. Model X ranges from roughly 335 to 352 miles depending on trim.

    Cargo space favors Model X modestly: about 88 cubic feet behind the front row with the rear seats folded, plus a 6.5-cubic-foot front trunk, according to Recharged’s measurements. The two-row Model Y holds about 76 cubic feet with its seats folded, while the longer Model Y L holds about 89 cubic feet, per Electrek. Towing tells a similar story: Model X can pull up to 5,000 pounds with the factory tow package, versus 3,500 pounds for any Model Y, a figure that drops further on seven-seat Model Y configurations paired with larger wheels.

    For most families cross-shopping these two today, the decision is simpler than it looks. If you need three usable rows of seating in a brand-new Tesla, the Model Y L is your only current option, and it costs tens of thousands of dollars less than what remains of the Model X. If you specifically want the Model X’s extra cargo room, higher tow rating, or falcon-wing doors, you will be shopping the used or remaining new-inventory market rather than ordering one built to your specs, since Tesla is no longer manufacturing it.

    Photo by dumitru B.

  • Buy these accessories in your first month.

    Buy these accessories in your first month.

    A new Tesla does not need much to be fully usable, but a handful of accessories solve real problems in the first few weeks. This guide sticks to categories that Tesla itself sells or that established EV outlets consistently recommend, not specific brands to buy.

    All-weather floor liners. Tesla’s carpet mats show wear and stains quickly, which is why the company sells its own all-weather interior liners through its shop. Electrek makes the same case for aftermarket sets: liners are easier to clean than carpet and reduce wear that can affect resale value later. Any set built specifically for your model and trim year does the job; the point is having one, not which brand you pick.

    A way to charge at home. Every Tesla ships with a Mobile Connector, which Tesla’s own support page lists as adding 4 to 6 miles of range per hour on a standard 120-volt household outlet, or 23 to 30 miles per hour on a 240-volt outlet, depending on the vehicle. For many owners who charge overnight, that is already enough. If you want faster, hands-off charging, Tesla’s Wall Connector adds up to 44 miles of range per hour at 11.5 kW (48 amps) on vehicles that support it, or up to 30 miles per hour on models capped at 32 amps, such as Model 3 and Model Y rear-wheel-drive versions. It costs $535 from Tesla and must be hardwired by a licensed electrician, so confirm you actually need the extra speed before buying one.

    A dedicated USB drive for Dashcam and Sentry Mode. Tesla’s built-in cameras only record once a USB drive is plugged in and formatted correctly. Tesla’s owner’s manual calls for at least 64 GB of storage, a sustained write speed of 4 MB/s or higher, and the exFAT format with a base-level folder named TeslaCam; the car can format a drive for you once it is plugged into the USB-A port in the glovebox. It is a small, inexpensive purchase that switches on a security feature that otherwise sits unused.

    A windshield sun shade. Tesla’s large windshield and glass roof let in more heat than a typical car, and outlets like Electrek recommend a heat shield or sunshade for that reason, both to keep the cabin cooler after parking in the sun and to limit UV exposure on the dashboard and trim over time.

    A portable tire inflator. Tire pressure affects range and tire wear, and Electrek flags a portable air compressor as worth keeping in the frunk so you can check and correct pressure without a stop at a gas station. That matters more on an EV, where an underinflated tire has a more noticeable effect on efficiency.

    A backup key card. By default, your phone is your Tesla’s key, connecting over Bluetooth, as described on Tesla’s vehicle keys support page. A dead phone battery or a software glitch can lock you out, which is why Tesla sells a Key Card two-pack with a bifold wallet for $40. It is a cheap way to make sure you are never stuck outside your own car.

    None of this requires spending much in the first month. Match each category to how you actually use the car: someone who parks in a garage can skip the sun shade, and someone who charges mostly at work may not need a Wall Connector at all.

    Photo by Makara Heng.

  • Inspect Your Tesla Before You Accept Delivery

    Inspect Your Tesla Before You Accept Delivery

    Before you sign for your Tesla and drive it off the lot, walk around the car and check it carefully. Once you accept delivery, it becomes harder to prove that a scratch, a loose trim piece, or a chip in the glass was there when you picked up the car rather than something that happened afterward.

    Start with the paperwork. Tesla has you submit insurance information, final payment, and identification through the app before your delivery appointment, and asks you to bring your driver’s license, insurance, and any trade-in documents so they can be matched against your order. At the vehicle, confirm the VIN matches that paperwork. Tesla’s own warranty documentation notes that the VIN is stamped on the upper dashboard, driver’s side, and is visible through the windshield.

    Walk the exterior in daylight. Look at panel gaps around the hood, doors, trunk, and charge port for consistency, and check the paint for scratches, swirl marks, or uneven color. Check every window and the windshield for chips or cracks. This matters beyond looks: Tesla’s new vehicle warranty excludes windshield or window glass that is broken, chipped, scratched, or cracked, unless it resulted from a defect in Tesla’s material or workmanship, so any glass damage you spot needs to be on record before you leave.

    Check the tires next. Look at tread depth and condition on all four. Tires are not covered by Tesla’s vehicle warranty; the same document states that tires have their own warranties and are subject to their own terms and conditions, so a tire issue is between you and the tire manufacturer, not Tesla.

    Inside, open and close every door, the trunk, and the frunk, and check that interior trim panels sit flush and don’t rattle. Test the seats, seatbelts, mirrors, and all interior and exterior lights, including turn signals and brake lights.

    On the touchscreen, confirm it boots up and responds normally. Tesla recommends reviewing “Meet Your Tesla” and your car’s software update information before you leave, and notes that you can tap “Service” on the touchscreen after delivery to reach the digital owner’s manual. Check the odometer too; a new vehicle’s reading should reflect only the mileage added during manufacturing, transport, and any test drives at the delivery center.

    Confirm what charging equipment came with your car. Tesla states plainly that charging equipment does not come standard with every Tesla vehicle, so check your order details against what is actually in the trunk or frunk before you drive away.

    If you find a problem, write it down on the delivery paperwork and photograph it before you sign. Your Tesla New Vehicle Limited Warranty coverage begins on the first day the vehicle is delivered, and to get anything fixed afterward, you contact Tesla and provide the VIN, current mileage, and a description of the defect. The signed delivery paperwork becomes available afterward in your Tesla Account, under “Manage” and then “Documents”, but a defect noted and photographed at delivery is easier to resolve than one reported after you have already been driving the car. Report anything you find right away, rather than waiting until you get home.

    Photo by Reinaldo Simoes.

  • Plan your first Tesla road trip this summer.

    Plan your first Tesla road trip this summer.

    Summer is peak road-trip season, and a Tesla makes long-distance driving easier than most people expect, as long as you understand two things going in: how the car plans your charging stops, and how much range you actually get once you’re holding highway speed. Here’s what a first-time Tesla road-tripper needs to know before pulling out of the driveway.

    Let the car plan your route

    You don’t need a third-party app to plan a Tesla road trip. Type your destination into the touchscreen, and Navigation identifies the fastest route along with the most convenient places to charge along the way. If your trip is long enough to require a charge, Trip Planner automatically builds Supercharger stops into your turn-by-turn directions, showing a recommended charging time at each stop and how much battery you’ll have when you arrive. The estimates update as you drive, accounting for real-time traffic, weather, and elevation change, and the car starts warming or cooling the battery before you reach a Supercharger so it’s ready to accept a faster charge the moment you plug in.

    You’re not locked into whatever the car suggests. You can remove a Supercharger stop from your route, and navigation also shows charging options at hotels, restaurants, and shopping centers if you’d rather charge somewhere with more to do while you wait, according to Tesla’s own travel-planning guidance.

    How big the Supercharger network is right now

    The scale of the network is a big reason Tesla road trips have gotten less stressful over the years. Tesla says it operates more than 80,000 Superchargers worldwide, and tracking of Tesla’s own quarterly data puts the total at roughly 79,900 charging stalls across more than 8,460 stations globally as of the first quarter of 2026, with U.S. locations alone topping 3,000 stations. The network grew about 19% year over year in that period, so new stations keep filling in gaps along popular routes. In practice, most interstates in the U.S. now have Superchargers spaced closely enough that you’re rarely far from one, even in less-traveled corridors.

    How fast you can actually charge

    Charging speed depends on your car, the specific stall, and how full your battery already is. By Tesla’s own figures, a Model 3 can add up to 175 miles of range in 15 minutes, a Model Y up to 162 miles, and a Model S up to 200 miles, under ideal conditions. Newer “V4” Supercharger stalls can push more power to vehicles built for it, up to 325 kilowatts as of January 2025, but current Model 3, Model Y, Model S, and Model X vehicles still cap out around 250 kW because of how their battery packs are built, so plugging into a newer stall won’t necessarily speed up your specific car.

    Charging also isn’t a flat rate the whole way. Your car pulls power fastest when the battery is low, and Tesla may automatically cap your charge limit at 80% at busy Supercharger locations to reduce congestion. That’s part of why the practical road-trip strategy is to charge to around 80% and get back on the road, rather than waiting around for a full battery.

    Your real range on the highway

    The range number on your car’s window sticker is an EPA combined estimate, and it leans toward city driving, where EVs are most efficient. Sustained highway speed tells a different story. Tesla’s own guidance notes that doubling your speed can require up to four times as much energy per mile, because aerodynamic drag rises sharply as you go faster. Independent testing backs this up: a widely cited 2023 study built on Car and Driver’s steady 75-mph highway test found the average EV fell about 12.5% short of its EPA-rated range, while gasoline vehicles in the same test actually beat their window-sticker numbers by about 4%.

    The takeaway: don’t plan a trip assuming you’ll get the full EPA number between charges. Budget for meaningfully less once you’re holding 75-80 mph on the interstate, and let Trip Planner’s live, in-car estimates, which account for your actual speed, elevation, and weather, guide your stops rather than the spec-sheet figure.

    How to cut down on charging stops and time

    A few habits make a real difference in total trip time:

    • Check tire pressure before you leave. Underinflated tires increase rolling resistance and hurt range, according to Tesla’s range guidance.
    • Take off roof racks or bike carriers you’re not using. Anything that adds drag costs you range at highway speed, per the same Tesla guidance.
    • Close the windows and keep cargo weight down for the same reason; both are on Tesla’s list of range-maximizing habits.
    • Set regenerative braking to Standard to conserve range during deceleration, a setting Tesla specifically recommends for road trips.
    • Charge to around 80%, not 100%, at Supercharger stops. Since Tesla’s own system already leans on 80% as a practical charge target at busy stations, treat it as your default too and get back on the road instead of topping off slowly.
    • Navigate to the Supercharger instead of just typing in the address separately, so the car preconditions the battery and it’s warm and ready to accept a fast charge when you arrive.
    • Watch the Energy app, not the range estimate, for a real-time read on how your speed and driving style affect consumption.

    None of this requires special planning software or a lot of EV experience. Type in your destination, let Trip Planner build the route, budget for highway range that runs meaningfully below the window-sticker number, and treat each Supercharger stop as a 15-to-25-minute break rather than a full recharge. For most summer trips within a few hundred miles of home, that’s really all the planning a first-time Tesla road-tripper needs.

    Photo by Saksham Vikram.

  • 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.