California's clean-truck incentive program has set aside around $165 million for the Tesla Semi, despite the electric truck not yet entering series production. This allocation, part of the Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project, has sparked concerns over market concentration and its effects on competing manufacturers. The funding aims to boost zero-emission vehicles in a sector that contributes heavily to air pollution and emissions.
California’s Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project (HVIP), launched in 2009, has distributed more than $1.6 billion in state and port funding to support zero-emission trucks and buses. The program targets medium- and heavy-duty vehicles, which account for a large portion of air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. In recent funding cycles, nearly 1,000 vouchers were tentatively assigned to the Tesla Semi, granting Tesla a much larger share than any other manufacturer, as reported by the LA Times.
Following an inquiry by the newspaper, public data was revised to exclude local port funding. Even so, Tesla stands to receive about $165 million, compared to $68 million for the next-largest recipient, Canadian bus maker New Flyer. To qualify for HVIP incentives, vehicles must have zero-emission powertrains certified by the California Air Resources Board and be listed in the program catalogue. When voucher requests for the Tesla Semi were submitted, certification records were incomplete, with only the 2024 model year listed as eligible; later model years were added afterward.
State officials note that certification involves confidential business information, and funds will only be disbursed once all requirements are fulfilled and vehicles are delivered. However, the first-come, first-served nature of HVIP, where funding rounds fill up quickly, means the Tesla reservations have restricted access for other producers with ready-to-deploy electric trucks.
Voucher amounts for the Tesla Semi range from $84,000 to $351,000 per vehicle post-adjustment. Documents suggest pricing at around $260,000 for the 300-mile version and $300,000 for the 500-mile variant, lower than the 2024 average for zero-emission heavy-duty trucks in California. The program covers up to 90% of the list price for private fleet operators.
The Tesla Semi prototype debuted in 2017, with production slated for 2019, but deliveries have been sparse. Only a handful have been confirmed under the voucher program so far, with many orders slated for fulfillment in late 2026. The truck is expected to go on sale in 2026.
This substantial backing highlights California's push for electrification but raises questions about equity in the zero-emission truck market.