Cybertruck price cuts amid recalls, tax credit loss, and unmet targets

Tesla's February 20, 2026, limited-time launch of a $59,990 base AWD Cybertruck—$20,000 below prior entry—and $99,990 Cyberbeast reflects deepening efforts to spur demand, following 2025 recalls, the end of federal EV incentives, and persistent sales shortfalls.

As detailed in prior coverage, Tesla introduced a base dual-motor AWD Cybertruck at $59,990 on February 20, replacing a discontinued RWD model and featuring adaptive damping, powered tonneau cover, bed outlets, and steer-by-wire—but lacking premium air suspension and other upscale options. CEO Elon Musk noted availability 'only for the next 10 days, depending on demand.' The Cyberbeast trim also dropped $15,000 after unbundling features like Full Self-Driving.

These moves address stagnant sales of around 5,000 units quarterly—well below the 250,000 annual goal—and a 2025 total of roughly 20,000 deliveries (48% YoY decline), exacerbated by rising Giga Texas inventory, production issues, and recent hardware recalls. Tesla's brand reputation dipped in key 2025 markets, compounded by the September discontinuation of the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and shifting consumer tastes away from high-priced electric pickups.

Even at $59,990, the entry price exceeds Elon Musk's 2019 unveiling promise of under $40,000, underscoring hurdles in the competitive EV truck segment where Tesla aims to rebuild momentum through affordability. Deliveries of the new variant begin in June 2026.

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Photorealistic illustration of discounted Tesla Cybertruck in showroom with sales stats and demand queue for news article.
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Tesla launches limited-time $59,990 AWD Cybertruck amid slumping sales and surging demand

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Tesla introduced a Dual Motor All-Wheel Drive base Cybertruck at $59,990—a $20,000 cut from the $79,240 premium AWD trim—available only until February 28, 2026, alongside a Cyberbeast reduction to $99,240. Amid 2025 sales of 20,237 units (down 48% YoY), strong demand has pushed U.S. deliveries to April 2027, as CEO Elon Musk noted future pricing will depend on this period.

Tesla has increased the price of its entry-level Cybertruck Dual Motor All-Wheel Drive from $59,990 to $69,990 effective March 1, 2026—just 10 days after launch—following CEO Elon Musk's announcement of temporary pricing amid strong demand pushing deliveries to 2027. The company also discontinued the lease option for this trim, further distancing current prices from 2019 promises.

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Following the end of a short-lived lease promotion, Tesla raised the US price of its entry-level Cybertruck All-Wheel Drive from around $60,000 to $70,000 effective March 1, 2026, just 10 days after launch. High demand has pushed deliveries into late 2026 or 2027.

Building on its Q4 2025 earnings announcement to shift Fremont factory space from Model S and X production to Optimus robots, Tesla faces an upheld $243 million Autopilot liability verdict while cutting Cybertruck prices to spur demand. CEO Elon Musk outlined near-term autonomy goals, with Robotaxi service expanding unsupervised operations.

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Tesla kicked off Cybertruck deliveries in the United Arab Emirates on January 21, 2026, handing over around 63 vehicles at a Dubai launch event. This marks the electric pickup's entry into the Middle East after initial deliveries in South Korea, even as US sales continue to slump—as detailed in prior coverage—and regulatory hurdles block Europe.

Following earlier policy shifts, Tesla has solidified its Full Self-Driving (FSD) transfer requirement to new vehicle deliveries by March 31, 2026, as detailed in a March 5, 2026 update. This particularly challenges entry-level Cybertruck Dual-Motor AWD buyers, who face summer 2026 deliveries and a price increase from $59,990, with no inventory for quicker options.

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Tesla shares fell approximately 2.6% to around $392 in early trading on March 2, 2026, amid rising oil prices from Middle East tensions and mixed European sales data. The decline followed a Cybertruck price increase to $69,990 for the dual-motor all-wheel-drive model. Investors weighed these factors against ongoing demand concerns in key markets.

 

 

 

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