For two years, Tesla cut prices on its best-selling car. Margins fell off a cliff, and demand still struggled to keep up with what Tesla could build.
On Saturday, Tesla blinked.
The company raised prices on the Model Y for the first time since 2024. But only on the higher-margin trims that already cost more.
The Numbers
Tesla's website now shows higher stickers on the Premium and Performance versions of the Model Y:
- Model Y Premium AWD: $49,990, up $1,000
- Model Y Premium RWD: $45,990, up $1,000
- Model Y Performance AWD: $57,990, up $500
The two base versions stayed flat. The rear-wheel drive is $39,990. The all-wheel drive is $41,990.
Tesla did not give a reason, which is typical for the company.
Here is what changed in plain terms: Tesla left the cheaper cars alone and pulled more profit from the higher trims. The buyers most sensitive to price did not get hit - but the buyers already paying more did.
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Why It Matters
Tesla spent two years in a price war with itself. Starting in early 2023, the company cut as much as $13,000 off the Model Y sticker price.
Another $2,000 cut came in April 2024.
Those cuts kept production lines moving, but they also crushed profit.
Tesla's automotive gross margins fell from over 25% in early 2023 to below 18% by mid-2025.
Each price cut was the company admitting demand was not keeping up.
A price hike says something different. Tesla now thinks there is room to charge more for the trims buyers want most.
Whether that holds is another question.
Tesla's Q1 2026 delivery numbers came in below expectations, and the company added 50,000 cars to inventory. Full-year 2025 deliveries dropped to 1.636 million, down from the 2023 peak.
The change is small. The signal is not.
What To Watch
Tesla is not pricing in a vacuum. The Hyundai Ioniq 5 AWD starts around $45,000.
The Ford Mustang Mach-E Select AWD starts at $42,995. Both are now cheaper than a Model Y Premium AWD.
Tesla shares closed Friday down 0.87% on the day.
Used Model Y prices on the resale market may also feel some lift from the change, since base trims now sit at least $4,000 below the cheapest Premium.
Last August, Tesla also raised its top Cybertruck trim by $15,000 even as Cybertruck sales came in soft. The pattern is the same on both vehicles: keep the cheaper versions flat, charge more for the premium ones.
Tesla just told the market it does not need to keep cutting prices to move cars. The market gets to test that.
For now, the higher trims are the only place Tesla is willing to push. The base cars stay parked at the same price, doing the work of bringing new buyers in.
Whether the strategy holds will show up in the next round of delivery numbers.
For now, Tesla is betting that its brand and Supercharger network are still worth a premium.
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