Tesla's stock faces a pivotal year in 2026, with predictions ranging from a decline to $300 to a rise to $600, amid slowing EV sales and hopes for breakthroughs in autonomous driving and robotics. While revenue growth is expected to rebound modestly, challenges like expiring tax credits and competition persist. Bulls emphasize future technologies, but bears highlight current business struggles.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) stock, currently trading near $437, has defied skeptics by surpassing its 2021 peak despite slowed sales growth and declining profits. In 2025, the company delivered 1.64 million vehicles, down 9% year-over-year, with Q4 figures at 418,227 units, a 16% sequential drop. This followed a Q3 revenue of $28.1 billion, up 12% year-over-year, though net income fell 37% to $1.37 billion, missing earnings estimates.
The expiration of U.S. EV tax credits in 2025 contributed to the slump, alongside increased competition from BYD, which surpassed Tesla with 28% delivery growth, and rivals like Waymo. Tesla's EV market share in California dipped below 50%, with declining registrations in Germany, France, and elsewhere. Operating margins shrank to 5.8% in Q3 from 10.8% a year earlier.
Looking to 2026, analysts project 13% revenue growth after a 3% decline in 2025, with deliveries potentially increasing 20% to 30%, per CEO Elon Musk. However, Morningstar anticipates decreases through the first three quarters. Wall Street's median one-year price target stands at $397.47, implying 9.15% downside, with a consensus "Hold" rating from 30 analysts: 12 Buy, 11 Hold, seven Sell. Targets range from $19.05 to $600. 24/7 Wall St. forecasts $461.73 by year-end, a 5.53% upside.
Bulls like Cathie Wood pivot to robotaxis and Optimus robots, arguing the auto business matters less. Robotaxis could transform idle vehicles into revenue generators, though Tesla's camera-only system crashes 12 times more often than human drivers, and full self-driving (FSD) adoption remains low despite a $99 subscription. Optimus V3 is slated for Q1 2026, with Musk claiming it will seem "like a person in a robot suit." Investor Jason Calacanis called it transformative, predicting it could eclipse Tesla's car legacy. Musk envisions $10 trillion in Optimus revenue, comprising 80% of valuation.
Lower interest rates may boost EV demand, but renewables' waning appeal and boycotts tied to Musk's politics—linked to 1 million lost sales from 2022 to 2025—pose risks. Institutional ownership is 47.62%, with 120 funds liquidating positions. If the broader market rallies, $600 is plausible; a downturn could see 30-50% drops.