Photorealistic illustration of discounted Tesla Cybertruck in showroom with sales stats and demand queue for news article.
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 announced the promotional pricing around February 20, 2026 (with updates confirmed by February 26), targeting the base Dual Motor AWD model (~435 horsepower, 325-mile range, 4.1-second 0-60 mph, 7,500-pound towing, 2,006-pound payload). Key features include coil spring suspension with adaptive dampers (no air suspension), powered tonneau cover, Powershare V2X bed outlets (two 120V, one 240V), four-wheel steering, steer-by-wire, mechanical locking differentials, 6x4-foot composite bed, powered frunk, 'tactical gray' textile heated seats, and a seven-speaker audio system. It omits premium air suspension, adjustable ride height, ventilated seats, rear screen/heating, ambient lighting, premium interior, cabin outlets, and 11,000-pound towing.

This undercuts rivals like the Rivian R1T ($72,990), Chevrolet Silverado EV ($73,100), and GMC Sierra EV ($62,400), with an estimated out-the-door ~$62,235 competitive against gas trucks like the Ram 1500 ($59,165). Musk stated on X the offer lasts 'only for the next 10 days' from announcement, depending on demand.

Context follows 2025 struggles: 20,237 U.S. deliveries (down ~48% from 39,000 in 2024, vs. 250,000 target), ~5,000 quarterly (19% YoY drop), rising Giga Texas inventory, production/recall issues, September 2025 RWD cancellation (<250 sold), and August 2025 Cyberbeast hike reversal. Initial base deliveries were slated for June 2026, but strong demand has delayed new U.S. orders to April 2027 (from September-October 2026 weeks ago). Reactions are mixed: value praised, but short window criticized. Tesla's dynamic pricing aims to boost volume while preserving utility.

Ohun tí àwọn ènìyàn ń sọ

X discussions show excitement over the $59,990 Cybertruck AWD trim's value and features, with surging demand extending U.S. deliveries to April 2027 and users advising to order quickly before price hikes. Official posts announce the limited-time offer, while some express skepticism viewing it as a desperate sales tactic amid 2025 sales drop.

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Tesla Cybertruck Dual Motor AWD with price hike from $59,990 to $69,990 after 10-day offer ends, showroom scene.
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Tesla raises Cybertruck Dual Motor AWD price to $69,990 as 10-day introductory offer ends

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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.

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.

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Tesla has pushed back the estimated delivery for new orders of its Cybertruck Dual Motor All-Wheel Drive variant to September-October 2026, from an initial June timeline. The company also plans to raise the price after February 28, following strong initial demand for the sub-$60,000 model. This development comes amid ongoing efforts to boost sales of the electric pickup.

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.

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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 has updated its Full Self-Driving (Supervised) transfer program, requiring new vehicle delivery by March 31, 2026, to qualify—a shift from prior order-placement criteria. This change, announced February 27 and refined on support pages, impacts Cybertruck Dual-Motor All-Wheel Drive buyers facing 2026-2027 deliveries and a recent price hike from $59,990 to $69,990, frustrating owners hoping to transfer $8,000+ software licenses.

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Tesla is developing a new compact electric SUV priced below the $36,990 Model 3 and measuring 168 inches (4.3 meters) long—shorter than the Model 3 (185.8 inches) and Model Y (188.7 inches)—according to Reuters citing four anonymous supplier sources. The all-new design awaits CEO Elon Musk's production approval and may launch first in China before expanding to U.S. and German factories, signaling a pivot back to core vehicles after a focus on robotaxis and humanoid robots.

 

 

 

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