While I find this highly doubtful it sure would be an interesting twist. 5 or 10% down and send me a contract that allows flexibility of final product. I’m gonna ask anyway.
The binding contract is important. Have to wonder if the is not a way this could be financially beneficial for Slate? I realize it’s not a lot of money directly for Slate, but the contract have potential value I would think.Experience from the last round of this: I put a deposit in on a Nissan Ariya in '21. When the IRA was announced in '22, Nissan sent out a letter saying that the deposit didn't constitute a binding contract, and offered to let those who had put down deposits sign a binding contract in order to be grandfathered into the old pre-IRA rules for the tax credits (allowing the Japan-made Ariya to still qualify).
I signed their binding contract before the IRA went into effect in '22, which included a "written", signed, contract that Nissan said needed to be printed out and stored with tax paperwork. They also kept contract confirmation on their side so that they could make it available to the government upon request as proof.
Then I was able to claim the credit after taking delivery of my Ariya in January of '23.
Slate would need to do something similar. It's possible, but so far they haven't, and no, the deposit isn't enough to be considered a binding contract. FWIW, what constitutes a "binding contract" varies some from one state to another. In order to avoid this issue, Nissan's binding contract included language that caused the laws of the company's US home state of Tennessee to apply regardless of the state of residence of the person signing.
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Maybe just haven’t given it proper consideration yet?That I do not understand.
Why wouldn't they?
Doesn’t the credit expire tomorrow?Maybe just haven’t given it proper consideration yet?
9/30?Doesn’t the credit expire tomorrow?
Hopefully people would understand the difference between a refundable$50 reservation and a binding contract.The reservations we have paid $50 for are explicitly refundable non-binding.
There is no guarantee on Slate giving us the truck, and we are not committed to buying. Slate has made no commitment on delivery date, or even price.
All of that would have to change for slate to offer us binding contracts, and I don't think slate will be ready to do that until next year some time. Even if they were to offer to convert the $50 reservation to a $50 non-refundable binding deposit, most wouldn't want to commit contractually over a year out, and the IRS could decide to change the rules anyway.