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Tesla's record revenue tops forecasts as tax credit expiry drives US EV sales

Tesla's record revenue tops forecasts as tax credit expiry drives US EV sales (FILE PHOTO/REUTERS)
23 Oct 2025 00:53

(REUTERS)

Tesla reported record third-quarter revenue, beating Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, driven by the highest quarterly sales of its electric vehicles as car buyers rushed to lock in a key US tax credit ahead of its expiry last month.

Shares of the Austin, Texas-based company fell less than 1% in extended trading.

The electric vehicle maker reported total revenue of $28.1 billion for the third quarter ended September 30, compared with analysts' average estimate of $26.37 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Profit per share in the third quarter was 50 cents, below analysts' estimates of 55 cents.

Tesla reported gross margin of 18%, compared with estimates of 17.5%.

Tesla's limited rollout of its self-driving "robotaxi" service in Austin, Texas, earlier this year marked a key strategic pivot, underpinning investor expectations that the company will transition from pure vehicle sales to focusing on self-driving technology.

While most of Tesla's current revenue is still derived from vehicle sales, its $1.45 trillion valuation largely reflects investor bets on robotics and AI.

Tesla introduced lower-cost "Standard" variants of Model Y and Model 3 vehicles earlier this month as part of a volume-growth push, cutting features and prices to make the vehicles more accessible after the expiration of a $7,500 US tax credit on EV purchases.

A rush in the US to grab the federal incentive before it went away at the end of September resulted in the company delivering a record number of vehicles in the third quarter.

While Tesla hopes the cheaper variants will drive higher volumes, analysts warn the move will squeeze margins as thousands of dollars of cost cuts per vehicle may not fully compensate for lower selling prices.

Wall Street expects Tesla's deliveries in 2025 to fall 8.5% due to the expiry of the tax credit, reliance on older models and rising competition. Musk's embrace of politics has also alienated some potential buyers.

Tesla is banking on the rollout of its lower-cost standard variants to revive volume growth, though some analysts remain skeptical of a strong rebound as the cheaper version could take away sales of more profitable premium vehicles.

For years, Tesla has benefited from selling regulatory credits to other automakers as they worked to comply with emissions or zero-emission vehicle mandates, representing a meaningful supplemental revenue stream.

That tailwind is rapidly fading. US policy changes are expected to reduce this income stream significantly, and analysts now estimate revenue for the highly profitable regulatory credits could fall dramatically in the coming quarters.

Source: REUTERS
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