During Tesla's January 28, 2026, Q4 2025 earnings call, CEO Elon Musk announced plans to transition Cybertruck production to fully autonomous vehicles for local cargo delivery, addressing a 48% sales drop in 2025, design concerns, and excess inventory.
Tesla's Cybertruck, launched for the 2024 model year with nearly 1.9 million pre-orders and a production target of 250,000 units annually, has faced significant challenges. A March 2025 recall by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration affected all 46,096 vehicles built to date. Sales fell from 38,965 units in 2024 to 20,237 in 2025—a 48% decline per Cox Automotive—amid broader U.S. Tesla sales dipping to 589,160 vehicles, partly due to policy uncertainties like tariffs.
Responding to a shareholder question about adapting the Cybertruck architecture for a more conventional pickup, Musk stated: "We will transition the Cybertruck to a fully autonomous line. There is obviously a market there for cargo delivery—localized cargo delivery. An autonomous Cybertruck could be useful for that."
Lars Moravy, Tesla VP of Vehicle Engineering, affirmed the platform's flexibility for autonomy and other vehicles, adding that the Cybertruck leads electric pickup sales despite competitors retreating. However, critics question its suitability for delivery: the angular, covered bed wastes space, lacks cabin-to-cargo access, conventional doors hinder frequent stops, and its large size and high price (starting at ~US$80,000) compare unfavorably to commercial vans.
To tackle inventory, Tesla expanded to the UAE (initial deliveries mid-January 2026) and South Korea; SpaceX reportedly contracted 1,000-2,000 units. Musk also disclosed ceasing Model S sedan and Model X SUV production in spring 2026 to repurpose their California factory for Optimus humanoid robots, targeting public sales in 2027.
The autonomous pivot raises logistics questions, as package handling from the bed would still need solutions, even driverless.