Tesla (TSLA) Stock: Why Tesla Is Raising Prices While the EV Market Slows

2 weeks ago 2

Rommie Analytics

TLDR

Tesla raised prices on higher-end Model Y trims by $500–$1,000, with the Premium AWD now starting at ~$50,000 The hike comes as U.S. EV sales fell 27% in Q1, while Tesla’s automotive gross margin rose to 21% from 14% a year ago The Model Y still dominated U.S. EV sales in Q1, with 78,591 units sold — 36% of all EVs sold in America Tesla stock trades at $422.24, which GuruFocus flags as 47.3% overvalued against its GF Value of $286.63 Insiders sold approximately $32.2 million in TSLA stock over the last three months

Tesla quietly raised prices on several Model Y trims in the U.S. on May 18, 2026. The Premium All-Wheel Drive model now costs around $50,000 — up $1,000 — while the Performance AWD went up $500. The standard RWD and AWD versions hold at roughly $40,000 and $42,000.

🚨 $TSLA – Tesla has raised prices for its Model Y lineup in the U.S.

🔹 Model Y Premium AWD: +$1,000 → now $49,990
🔹 Model Y Premium RWD: +$1,000 → now $45,990
🔹 Model Y Performance AWD: +$500 → now $57,990
The move comes as Tesla appears to be shifting away from… pic.twitter.com/IaAizwfaRV

— Emmanuel – Big Tech & AI Investor (@EmmanuelInvest) May 16, 2026

The Model 3 lineup appears unchanged.

Tesla has not raised Model Y prices in the U.S. since 2024. The company did not respond to requests for comment on the increases.


TSLA Stock Card
Tesla, Inc., TSLA

The timing is a little counterintuitive. U.S. EV sales dropped 27% in Q1 compared to the same period last year. EVs now make up just 5%–6% of new car sales, down from nearly 10% in Q3 2025 — before the $7,500 federal purchase tax credit expired last September. The average EV price has since fallen from around $58,000 to $55,000.

Despite that backdrop, Tesla may be raising prices because demand for higher-end Model Y trims is holding up — or it’s pushing for better margins.

Margins Are Recovering

Tesla’s automotive gross margin hit 21% in Q1, excluding regulatory credit sales. That’s up from 14% in Q1 2025, though still well below the 32% peak from Q1 2022.

For the full year, Wall Street expects Tesla to sell around 1.7 million EVs globally — roughly in line with 2025. Tesla peaked at 1.8 million in 2023.

The Model Y remains the top-selling EV in the U.S. by a wide margin. Tesla moved 78,591 units in Q1, up 23% year-over-year, capturing 36% of all U.S. EV sales.

Tesla’s Focus Is Shifting

Tesla recently stopped production of the Model S and X to convert its Fremont, California, factory to robot manufacturing. The robo-taxi service launched in Austin, Texas, in June, and is expanding.

Analysts and investors have largely been focused on that side of the business — not EV pricing. AI-related developments have been the bigger driver of the stock recently.

TSLA currently trades at $422.24. GuruFocus values the stock at $286.63 using its GF Value model — implying the stock is 47.3% overvalued. The P/E ratio stands at 387x, compared to its five-year median of 107x.

The GF Score sits at 82/100. Growth ranks 9/10 and financial strength at 8/10. Valuation ranks 3/10.

Insiders have sold roughly $32.2 million in TSLA stock over the past three months.

Through Friday’s close, Tesla stock was down 6% year-to-date and up 21% over the past 12 months.

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