Illustration of a lone Tesla Cybertruck in an empty lot, highlighting a 48% sales decline in 2025 with overlaid statistics.
Illustration of a lone Tesla Cybertruck in an empty lot, highlighting a 48% sales decline in 2025 with overlaid statistics.
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Tesla Cybertruck sales fall nearly 50% in 2025

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Tesla's Cybertruck sales dropped sharply to 20,237 units in 2025, a 48.1% decline from 38,965 in 2024, according to Cox Automotive data. This marked the largest absolute sales drop among U.S. electric vehicles, amid broader EV market challenges including the end of a $7,500 tax credit. Despite the setback, Tesla remained the top EV seller in the U.S. with about 589,160 vehicles sold.

Tesla's unconventional electric pickup, the Cybertruck, experienced a significant sales decline in 2025, falling nearly 50% from the previous year. Data released on January 13, 2026, by Cox Automotive showed 20,237 Cybertrucks sold in the U.S., compared to 38,965 in 2024. This 18,728-unit drop was the steepest in absolute terms for any electric vehicle model.

The broader electric vehicle market also contracted slightly, with 1,275,714 units sold in 2025, down 2% from 1,301,441 in 2024. Sales peaked in the third quarter at 365,830 units, driven by buyers rushing to claim the $7,500 federal tax credit before its expiration on September 30, 2025, under President Donald Trump and Congress. Fourth-quarter sales fell to 234,171 units.

Tesla attributed its overall U.S. sales dip—589,160 vehicles in 2025, a 7% decrease from 633,762 in 2024—to 'near-term uncertainty from shifting trade, tariff and fiscal policy,' as stated in a third-quarter investor presentation. Analysts highlighted additional factors, including CEO Elon Musk's political involvement with Trump and conservative stances. A November 2025 Yale University study estimated the 'Musk partisan effect' cost Tesla 1-1.26 million vehicles from October 2022 to April 2025, while boosting rivals' sales by 17-22%.

Stephanie Valdez Streaty, director of industry insights at Cox Automotive, emphasized structural issues: 'Tesla faced a tough year in 2025, a second tough year in a row, because its product line is aging, and the company hasn't been able to bring a high-volume product to market to offset that.' She noted the Cybertruck's low-volume, high-priced nature limited its impact on Tesla's trajectory, amid rising EV competition.

Among Tesla's models, the Model Y led with 357,528 sales (down 4% from 372,613), followed by Model 3 at 192,440 (up slightly from 189,903). Luxury models struggled: Model S at 5,889 (from 12,426) and Model X at 13,066 (from 19,855). Despite the Cybertruck's woes, Tesla held a 46% U.S. EV market share.

The pickup segment proved resistant to electrics, with Ford discontinuing the F-150 Lightning and Ram shelving full-electric plans. Cybertruck sales lagged 38% behind 2024 in the first three quarters, suggesting waning early-adopter enthusiasm.

Cosa dice la gente

Reactions on X to the Tesla Cybertruck's 48.1% sales decline in 2025 (to 20,237 units) are mostly negative, emphasizing the largest drop among US EVs and a 68% Q4 plunge. Users criticize weak demand, design flaws, and hype fade; some attribute it to pricing or EV market issues; Tesla still leads overall EV sales. Skeptical and bearish sentiments dominate from investors and critics.

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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.

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Tesla is undergoing a major strategic pivot amid a sharp sales decline in China, the end of Model S and X production to focus on robots, and plans to introduce its Semi truck in Europe. The company's challenges and ambitions are reflected in divided analyst opinions and ambitious production targets. This triple transition highlights Tesla's shift from traditional automotive manufacturing toward robotics and AI.

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