Love ’em or hate ’em (and that may be shaped largely by your view of Elon Musk), Tesla electric cars are a common sight on the roads these days.
And with a facelifted Tesla Model Y currently being rolled out and some catching up to do in the sales charts, Tesla recently invited potential customers to visit its showrooms to try some of its models.
I must once have recorded my details with my local Tesla dealer because I too received an invitation. It sounded like a good opportunity to go undercover to see how the company sells cars and meet both those pondering their first EV and seasoned drivers thinking of switching brands.
EVs made up 19.6% of car sales last year, according to the SMMT. That figure was up a fifth on 2023 but still short of the 22% demanded by the zero-emissions vehicle mandate.
Through 2024, Tesla’s year-to-date market share dipped too, but by the end of the year, its overall market share was just about up (by 1.54%) – and the Model Y was the UK’s fifth-most-popular car.
Anyway, invitation in hand, a few months back I duly turned up at Tesla Guildford ready to play the clueless punter. A sales advisor quickly earned my attention with a Morrisons cake and a Nespresso coffee before matching me to a new, long-range Model 3.
On personal contract hire with maintenance and an annual mileage cap of 10,000 miles, it would, he said, cost me £374 per month over three years with a 12-month (£4488) down payment.
Too much? There was the standard-range car for £324 per month instead, but few were available. “It’s almost sold out, with fresh supplies not arriving for a few months,” he told me. “The deal may have changed by then, too. Take a long-range Model 3 for a test drive and think it over.”
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Who the hell cares, its not like the guy personally builds them or has really any involvement with the company these days. If we were to make purchasing decisions based on the political views of the founders, VW would never sell a single car in the UK.
I don't buy Teslas because of the over reliance on a single touchscreen to do everything with the car, and because they have shoddy build quality. Nothing to do with the founder.
Bit of a pro Tesla advert article. Quoting stats for the full year rather than the last 3 months would have highlighted the Elon factor which afterall was the article's purpose.
I made money in the past on Tesla and big up'd their achivements but now they've an ageing tiny line up of just 2 cars in Europe with nothing in the pipe line other than promises and the stupid cyper cab.
It could make me breakfast and I still wouldn't. Neither should you. Have a word with yourself.