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Slate electric trucks will cost less than an average used car, even without tax credits

https://sherwood.news/tech/slate-el...t-less-than-an-average-used-car-even-without/

June 2, 2025

The federal $7,500 EV tax credit likely won’t be around when the first Slate Auto electric truck rolls off its Indiana lot at the end of 2026, but even still, the so-called Blank Slate is expected to not only cost less than most new vehicles (both electric and gas), but many used cars, too.

Slate’s head of public relations, Jeff Jablansky, said the truck will still cost in the “mid-$20,000s.” The average price of a used car in the US is currently about $25,500, according to Kelley Blue Book, or nearly $28,000, CarGurus shows.

“We’re not just competing with new vehicles,” Jablansky told Sherwood News.

Rather, the new EV company is looking to compete with the used car market, which sells more than twice the number of vehicles as the new car market in the US each year.

“When [consumers] turn to something that is more affordable, it usually has higher miles, probably is older, the condition is not as great,” he said. “So we’re working in that framework.”

Of course, other EV companies have walked back their promises on price before. When TeslaTSLA $309.66 (-0.07%) first unveiled its Cybertruck, it was supposed to cost $40,000. The initial release cost was about $100,000, and the trucks, which are piling up for lack of demand, now start at $70,000 without the current tax credit.

Jablansky says that the sub-$30,000 price is firm. He believes the company can pull it off because the truck will be made in Indiana and its parts have been sourced with tariffs, which will cause many other automakers to raise prices, in mind. “ We are fairly insulated from the tariffs, the way we’ve made procurement decisions over the last two and a half years,” he said.

Another thing that will help keep the price down is the bare-bones nature of the truck.

The base model doesn’t have such creature comforts as automatic windows or infotainment systems — pretty standard features these days that contribute heavily to the cost of a car — so it not only costs less to start, but faces less variability in price by including less in its calculations.

With a tiny stature, a tow rating of 1,000 pounds, and a payload of 1,400, the Slate truck is more appropriate for pulling a jet ski than boat, and lends itself more to hauling Facebook Marketplace furniture than fording rivers.
“The next year and a half, pretty much till delivery, we’re refining what we’ve done. We’re not making big engineering decisions.”

Unlike the Cybertruck, which came out with a lower range than advertised, Slate is confident it can achieve the 150-mile base and 240-mile extended range it’s promised, based on recent testing.

 “We stayed under the radar for basically three years, did a lot of development,” Jablansky said. “The next year and a half, pretty much till delivery, we’re refining what we’ve done. We’re not making big engineering decisions — those have been done already. At this point we’re testing, evaluating, refining.”

That includes taking cues from what people want, which seems to be different for different people.

Besides its price, one thing that’s made the Slate truck so compelling is the ability to customize the truck (which, of course, would make it more expensive). So far, Slate has received more than 100,000 refundable reservations for the truck. Using an online tool called the Slate Maker, people have customized nearly 8 million vehicles so far.

They can add things like roll-up windows or colored wraps to make the truck something other than the standard gray. Customization options range from big — like turning the two-seater into a five-seat SUV — to small additions, like lights and decals.

“It’s not that everyone is shifting toward one preference, that they all want this or they all want that, or no one wants this,” Jablansky said. Nor have the registrations been sequestered to certain demographics or geographic regions in the US.

“This isn’t an EV that’s speaking to just EV people; it’s not a truck, speaking to truck people,” he said.
“By and large, people can’t work on their own cars anymore... Slate owners will be empowered to make repairs.”

More than just letting people design their own trucks and customize them with a range of add-ons they can install themselves, the company thinks it can save customers money by allowing them to fix their vehicles, as well.

If someone gets in a fender bender, say, and dents a side panel or the bumper, Slate will send them the part and videos on how to install it through so-called Slate University.

“By and large, people can’t work on their own cars anymore,” Jablansky said. “Through Slate University, Slate owners will be empowered to make repairs.”

Slate won’t have dealerships or shops, but will partner with repair shops nationwide in case the fix is more difficult or you’re not inclined toward DIY.

Jablansky told Sherwood that Slate expects to be profitable within the first year of operation, even if people simply buy the base Blank Slate with no add-ons.

“We expect to make money on each vehicle,” he said.

Of course, a lot can happen between now and then, so we’ll believe all this when we see it.
 

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Jablansky told Sherwood that Slate expects to be profitable within the first year of operation, even if people simply buy the base Blank Slate with no add-ons.

“We expect to make money on each vehicle,” he said.
This is a bit concerning from the consumer standpoint. Companies often lose money when starting up- it is expected.

Someone called Slate the "highest margin vehicle ever sold" and I think that is becoming more and more true....
 

bartflossom

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The announcement video states, "Mid Twenties", and then says, "with current incentives under Twenty. It doesn't seem to me that they've actually changed their price at all. They've always been above board about the incentive imho.
 

1yeliab_sufur1

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Yah my talk the other day the sales representative still said mid-20’s is firm so this could just be different wording it. Mid-20’s is under 30k and that part of profitable after the first year is big big talk so I’m wondering how many they think will sell not just based on the reservation numbers I hope and if they are making profit on every truck sold how high is there cut I wonder like to build the truck could be 20,000 and mark up to the 27,500 idk
 

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I'd love to have them build a selection of customized trucks and then tell us what those will cost once you price in the accessories.

The other thing is on the resale size the value of the add-ons is almost zero. If you get a higher trim level of any other car it's going to be worth more.
 

5ohbrad

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We've moved the goalpost $10,000 (50%!!!) since April. Not a good trajectory.
The way I understand it, $25k + delivery and a few options under $30k = no change except the addition of delivery fees (standard) and the removal of incentives. That said, I think the practice of advertising pricing with incentives already applied is ridiculous. At least this thing isn’t as vulnerable to tariffs as the Maverick. A 2025 Maverick XL with no options or tariffs applied stickers for $36k. By my math, base Slate $25k+$2k delivery (probably less) still undercuts a Maverick with no cruise or tow package by about $9k. I get that the Maverick to Slate isn’t apples to apples, but it gives a point of reference.
 

skidoofast

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This is a bit concerning from the consumer standpoint. Companies often lose money when starting up- it is expected.

Someone called Slate the "highest margin vehicle ever sold" and I think that is becoming more and more true....
Ya I hate it when a company (any company) does what they do to pull a profit, isn’t it the American dream to loose your ass 🤦🏻
 

skidoofast

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We've moved the goalpost $10,000 (50%!!!) since April. Not a good trajectory.
Still the same price as the launch, no misleading or moving the goal post

if you and your buddy were going to buy a pizza for $20 and then your buddy decided not to give you $10 do you blame Papa John that you had to pay $20? Papa Johns told you it was $20, the price didn’t change because your buddy didn’t pay
 

bartflossom

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The volkswagon Beetle was selling around 400K a year in the us at it's height in the later 60's. A two door cramped vehicle with no bed and very little storage. I'm not saying the Slate will be a cultural icon like that but I think it has the best shot of any vehicle since.
 

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I'd love to have them build a selection of customized trucks and then tell us what those will cost once you price in the accessories.

The other thing is on the resale size the value of the add-ons is almost zero. If you get a higher trim level of any other car it's going to be worth more.
^^^

Correctly said about add on accessories and resale.

With an EV this low, I'd keep it for at least until the HV battery warranty is good....
 

AZFox

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Speaking of the Beetle, I owned some of them.

Someone named John Muir (the engineer one, not the Sierra Club one) published the predecessor to Slate University, but for Volkswagens, and it's a spiral-bound book instead of videos.

"How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive -- A Manual of Step-By-Step Procedures For the Compleat [sic] Idiot"

The book was filled with illustrations and humor that made it worth looking through even if you didn't have the car to go with it.

Slate Auto Pickup Truck Article: Slate trucks will cost less than an average used car, even without tax credits Keep_VW_Alive_Book
 
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Milous

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...A 2025 Maverick XL with no options or tariffs applied stickers for $36k. By my math, base Slate $25k+$2k delivery (probably less) still undercuts a Maverick with no cruise or tow package by about $9k.
The base XL Maverick starts at $28,145 (+ destination), not $36k. And the XL includes Cruise and a 13.2" Touchscreen, plus a slew of other standard features.
 

AZFox

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The base XL Maverick starts at $28,145 (+ destination), not $36k. And the XL includes Cruise and a 13.2" Touchscreen, plus a slew of other standard features.
The cost of [insert $28,000 item here] is only important if it's a substitute product compared to the Slate Truck, which the Maverick isn't.

Put another way, the Maverick is a horse of another color.
 
 
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