Tesla Ends Lease Buyouts, Stops Providing Charging Cables
As of April 15, customers who lease a car from Tesla will no longer be able to purchase it outright at the end of their lease. According to Inside EVs, the company has changed the language in the Eligibility section of it leasing page on its website to say:
- All Tesla vehicles delivered on or after April 15, 2022 are not eligible for purchase.
- Third-party dealerships and third-party individuals are not eligible to purchase leased vehicles.
Customers who leased a Tesla prior to April 15 are not affected by the change. Not even the great and powerful Musk can alter the terms of a legal contract retroactively. For leases entered into after April 13, 2019, the buyer/lessee is obligated to pay a $350 purchase fee.
The Model 3 has always been an exception. Starting in 2019, the leasing contracts for those cars did not include a purchase option because Tesla said at the time it intended to use them as part of a robotaxi/ride-hailing fleet. Tesla, of course, does not deign to answer questions from the press about these matters. Apparently, free speech includes the right to say nothing.
Inside EVs speculates that the recent spike in prices for used EVs is behind this latest policy change. “Tesla likely wants to cash in on this and sell the used cars for profit as their lease deals expire or lease them again as used vehicles,” it says. For decades, one of the things that people liked about leasing was they knew at the beginning how much they could buy the car for when it was over. Tesla has now eliminated one of the reasons to lease a car in the first place.
The publication also reports Elon said something at the Cyber Rodeo event last week that signals a shift away from the idea of using pre-owned Model 3s in a robotaxi fleet. “There’s going to be a dedicated robotaxi that’s going to look quite futuristic.” What that statement means or when those dedicated vehicles might make an appearance is anyone’s guess. Who knows? Maybe the people carriers that appeared in sketches depicting the future of underground transportation via tunnels created by The Boring Company will appear some day?
No Charging Cables For You!
Until now, every new Tesla has been delivered with a mobile charging cable customers could use to charge their Teslas at home or anywhere else they can find a normal electricity outlet. No more. The mobile charging kit new owners used to get with their cars will no longer be provided.