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Rivian Just Started Delivering Its $58,000 R2 SUV

Published Jun 10, 2026
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A blue electric SUV is parked at a charging station outdoors near a forested area, with mountains in the background and a cloudy sky above. The BriefsFinance logo appears in the bottom right corner.
Summary:
  • Rivian began handing over its new R2 SUV to customers, starting around $58,000.
  • It aims to deliver 20,000 to 25,000 R2s by year-end.
  • A deal with Uber could put up to 40,000 R2s on the road as robotaxis.

America just made electric cars more expensive. The $7,500 federal EV tax credit is gone, and many carmakers are pulling back.

Rivian picked this exact moment to launch its most important car yet.

On Tuesday, it started handing over the R2. It is a smaller, cheaper SUV that the whole company is riding on.

A Cheaper Rivian, Finally

The R2 takes Rivian's first SUV and shrinks it down. The result is smaller, simpler, and easier to afford.

The R2 starts around $58,000. That is still not cheap, but it is a big step down from Rivian's first SUV.

The firm says a version under $50,000 is coming in 2027. A roughly $45,000 model should follow later that year.

Rivian wants to deliver 20,000 to 25,000 R2s by year-end. Hit that, and it would be one of the fastest EV launches the US has seen.

Rivian has promised a sub-$50,000 EV for years. Now it is finally close.

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Launching Into A Tough Market On Purpose

The timing looks rough. The federal EV tax credit ended last fall, and rules that pushed carmakers toward EVs got weaker.

Even Tesla's sales are slipping. Most rivals have shelved or killed their US EV plans.

Rivian's CEO sees it differently. Fewer new EVs on sale means less competition for the ones that are.

It is like opening a lemonade stand on the one hot day every other stand closed early.

There is a global angle too. China keeps pumping out cheap EVs, and some countries are racing to let them in.

Canada recently cut its tariffs on cheap Chinese EVs to fight rising car prices.

The Real Prize Is Robotaxis

The R2 isn't just about selling cars. Rivian is building it to one day drive itself, as TechCrunch reported.

Back in December, Rivian laid out its self-driving plan. The R2 sits right at the center of it.

In March, Uber struck a deal with Rivian worth up to $1.25 billion. It could put as many as 40,000 R2s on Uber's network as robotaxis.

A robotaxi runs all day with no driver to pay. That math is why Uber wants in.

That is a second business hiding inside the first. It is exactly the kind of market disruptor that catches investors early.

What To Watch

Rivian builds the R2 in Illinois now. It is adding a second plant in Georgia for late 2028.

The next six months come down to one thing. Can it build and deliver the R2s it promised?

Building cars is hard. Building them fast and cheap is harder.

The cheaper Rivian is finally here. Now it has to move them.

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