logo
Tesla launches Model Y in India at $70,000 amid high import tariffs

Tesla launches Model Y in India at $70,000 amid high import tariffs

Express Tribune14 hours ago
Listen to article
Tesla launched on Tuesday its Model Y at about $70,000 in India, a significant markup relative to its other major markets, reflecting the country's high tariffs on electric vehicle imports which CEO Elon has long-criticised.
With deliveries estimated to start from the third quarter, the US automaker is targeting a niche electric vehicle segment in India that accounts for just 4% of overall sales in the world's third-largest car market.
It will compete mainly with German luxury giants such as BMW, Mercedes-Benz and South Korea's Kia rather than domestic mass-market EV players such as Tata Motors and Mahindra .
Tesla opened its first showroom in Mumbai on Tuesday and began taking Model Y orders on its website, marking its long-awaited entry into the market where Musk once had plans to open a factory.
For now, Tesla will import cars into a country where tariffs and related duties can exceed 100%, driving up the price for consumers.
Tesla's Model Y rear-wheel drive is priced at about 6 million rupees ($70,000), while its Model Y long-range rear-wheel drive costs 6.8 million rupees, according to the website.
The prices include the tariff and additional levies imposed by the state. There was no breakdown of the price on the website and Reuters could not immediately ascertain the listing price.
They compare with a starting price from $44,990, opens new tab in the United States, 263,500 yuan ($36,700) in China, and 45,970 euros ($53,700) in Germany.
At the media-only event at the showroom, Tesla displayed two Model Y cars made in China and its supercharger, which it will install at eight different locations in Mumbai and in and around New Delhi, where it is also expected to open its next showroom.
"We are here to create the ecosystem, to invest in the necessary infrastructure including the charging infrastructure," Isabel Fan, a regional director at Tesla, said at the launch event.
'We are building from 0 to 100. It will take time to cover the whole country.'
Talks on tariffs
Grappling with excess capacity in global factories and declining sales, Tesla has adopted a strategy of selling imported vehicles in India, despite the duties and levies.
The US EV maker has long lobbied India for lower import tariffs on cars, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's officials remain in talks with US President Donald Trump's administration to lower the levies under a bilateral trade deal.
Tesla's US factories also do not currently make the right-hand drive vehicles that are used in India.
The company's Full Self-Driving capability is on offer at an additional cost of 600,000 rupees, but the website said that "active driver supervision" will be required, and the current features do not make the vehicle autonomous.
Although India's road infrastructure has improved, traffic discipline - like lane driving - is still rudimentary, EV chargers are far and few and stray animals, including cattle, and potholes on the road are a big hurdle, even in cities.
"In the future we wish to see R&D and manufacturing done in India, and I am sure at an appropriate stage Tesla will think about it," Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis told reporters outside the new Tesla outlet.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tesla marks India entry with first showroom
Tesla marks India entry with first showroom

Business Recorder

time4 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Tesla marks India entry with first showroom

MUMBAI: Tesla unveiled its first showroom in India on Tuesday, marking its entry into the world's most populous country, as Elon Musk's electric vehicle company seeks new customers amid sagging sales in the United States and Europe. The store opened its doors in India's financial capital Mumbai to select visitors after its inauguration by Maharashtra state's chief minister Devendra Fadnavis. The company — which is targeting a niche but quickly growing electric vehicle market in India — said that it was currently offering its Model Y car in India and would look to start rolling out deliveries of a cheaper variant later this quarter. 'This is the first launch of Tesla in India. It marks a huge milestone for Tesla globally,' said Isabel Fan, the company's senior regional director, adding that charging stations would be set up in Mumbai and the capital New Delhi shortly. While the showroom will open to the general public on Wednesday, curious onlookers and Tesla admirers braved Mumbai's heavy rains to catch a glimpse of the cars on display. Tesla has for years signalled its interest in India but held back due to the country's steep tariffs on electric vehicles. Musk, who once described India as having 'more promise than any large country', has also criticised its import duties, calling them among the 'highest in the world'. New Delhi has offered to cut import taxes on electric vehicles for global automakers only if they commit to investing hundreds of millions of dollars and make cars locally. Tesla has yet to announce plans to set up a plant in India. For now, local media reports say, the company will likely sell cars imported from China. As a result, its Model Y variants start from an on-road price of around $70,000 in India, according to its website, far higher than a US price of $37,490 after a $7,500 federal tax credit. Tesla's India debut comes at a critical time for the company, which is seeing demand wane for its cars in countries around the world.

Tesla launches Model Y in India at $70,000 amid high import tariffs
Tesla launches Model Y in India at $70,000 amid high import tariffs

Express Tribune

time14 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Tesla launches Model Y in India at $70,000 amid high import tariffs

Listen to article Tesla launched on Tuesday its Model Y at about $70,000 in India, a significant markup relative to its other major markets, reflecting the country's high tariffs on electric vehicle imports which CEO Elon has long-criticised. With deliveries estimated to start from the third quarter, the US automaker is targeting a niche electric vehicle segment in India that accounts for just 4% of overall sales in the world's third-largest car market. It will compete mainly with German luxury giants such as BMW, Mercedes-Benz and South Korea's Kia rather than domestic mass-market EV players such as Tata Motors and Mahindra . Tesla opened its first showroom in Mumbai on Tuesday and began taking Model Y orders on its website, marking its long-awaited entry into the market where Musk once had plans to open a factory. For now, Tesla will import cars into a country where tariffs and related duties can exceed 100%, driving up the price for consumers. Tesla's Model Y rear-wheel drive is priced at about 6 million rupees ($70,000), while its Model Y long-range rear-wheel drive costs 6.8 million rupees, according to the website. The prices include the tariff and additional levies imposed by the state. There was no breakdown of the price on the website and Reuters could not immediately ascertain the listing price. They compare with a starting price from $44,990, opens new tab in the United States, 263,500 yuan ($36,700) in China, and 45,970 euros ($53,700) in Germany. At the media-only event at the showroom, Tesla displayed two Model Y cars made in China and its supercharger, which it will install at eight different locations in Mumbai and in and around New Delhi, where it is also expected to open its next showroom. "We are here to create the ecosystem, to invest in the necessary infrastructure including the charging infrastructure," Isabel Fan, a regional director at Tesla, said at the launch event. 'We are building from 0 to 100. It will take time to cover the whole country.' Talks on tariffs Grappling with excess capacity in global factories and declining sales, Tesla has adopted a strategy of selling imported vehicles in India, despite the duties and levies. The US EV maker has long lobbied India for lower import tariffs on cars, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's officials remain in talks with US President Donald Trump's administration to lower the levies under a bilateral trade deal. Tesla's US factories also do not currently make the right-hand drive vehicles that are used in India. The company's Full Self-Driving capability is on offer at an additional cost of 600,000 rupees, but the website said that "active driver supervision" will be required, and the current features do not make the vehicle autonomous. Although India's road infrastructure has improved, traffic discipline - like lane driving - is still rudimentary, EV chargers are far and few and stray animals, including cattle, and potholes on the road are a big hurdle, even in cities. "In the future we wish to see R&D and manufacturing done in India, and I am sure at an appropriate stage Tesla will think about it," Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis told reporters outside the new Tesla outlet.

xAI, Grok lands $200 million US defence contract
xAI, Grok lands $200 million US defence contract

Express Tribune

time20 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

xAI, Grok lands $200 million US defence contract

The United States government has awarded a defence contract worth up to $200 million to Elon Musk's artificial intelligence company, xAI, just a week after its flagship chatbot, Grok, came under intense scrutiny for controversial posts. The award, made through the Department of Defense's Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office (CDAO), names xAI as one of several recipients (alongside Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI) selected to help modernise AI capabilities across a range of military operations. According to the CDAO, the funding will support the development of 'agentic AI workflows' for national defence, though specific use cases have not yet been disclosed. The timing of the announcement has sparked controversy. Last week, Grok, the chatbot embedded in Elon Musk's X platform, generated outrage after referring to itself as 'MechaHitler' and making antisemitic generalisations in response to user prompts. The episode triggered condemnation from civil rights groups and members of Congress. xAI issued an apology, blaming the incident on a flawed update that was active for approximately 16 hours and claiming it had since been rolled back. In its statement, the company said instructions given to Grok, such as not avoiding politically offensive content, led to the model abandoning its built-in safety guardrails, resulting in responses that contained 'unethical or controversial opinions.' Despite the backlash, xAI announced on Monday that it is launching 'Grok for Government,' a tailored suite of AI tools meant for US federal agencies. Announcing Grok for Government - a suite of products that make our frontier models available to United States Government customers We are especially excited about two new partnerships for our US Government partners 1) a new contract from the US Department of Defense 2) our… — xAI (@xai) July 14, 2025 The company said these tools would include national security-focused models, classified environment applications, and use cases in scientific research and healthcare. Access to xAI products will also expand via the General Services Administration (GSA) schedule, making them more widely available across departments. Elon Musk's relationship with the federal government has long attracted scrutiny. As head of the now-defunct Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Musk played a prominent role in reshaping contracting processes, but concerns about conflicts of interest persisted. Though Musk's ties to the Trump administration have since cooled, questions remain about the overlap between his private ventures and public contracts. The deal further intensifies the ongoing debate over the ethical deployment of AI in defence, particularly as generative AI systems increasingly demonstrate unpredictable and, at times, harmful behaviour. Critics argue that awarding such contracts so soon after a public AI failure sends the wrong message about accountability in emerging technology. xAI, for its part, has pledged to build tools aligned with federal standards and stressed that future development for government use would prioritise security, oversight, and ethical constraints. Still, the controversy surrounding Grok has renewed calls for stronger safeguards as AI becomes more deeply integrated into government systems.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store