(Bloomberg) -- Tesla Inc. is tempting customers with charging perks and cheap financing to help revitalize sales amid a slow start to the year for the electric-vehicle maker.
The company is offering free lifetime supercharging on Foundation Series Cybertrucks purchased after Feb. 28. It’s also advertising 0% APR or zero due at signing for Model 3s and discounts on older Model Y units as it ramps up production of a refreshed version. The more expensive Model X and Model S also come with lifetime supercharging.
Tesla’s first quarter is traditionally slow, but this year’s slump is significant. Vehicle sales and shipments have dropped year-over-year in key markets, with China — its biggest market — reporting a 49% drop in Tesla shipments last month, according to preliminary data from China’s Passenger Car Association. In France, registrations fell 26% in February after a slow January, while overall European sales declined 45% year-over-year in January. And in California, Tesla’s largest US market, Model 3 registrations dropped 36% in 2024.
Tesla’s shares fell 4.7% at 1:20 p.m. in New York on Tuesday amid broad market declines over concerns about a global trade war. The EV maker’s stock tumbled 30% this year through Monday’s close.
Tesla’s Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk’s polarizing political moves in the US and Europe this year have fueled consumer backlash, with showrooms and supercharger locations experiencing protests and vandalism. Some Tesla owners have even added anti-Musk stickers to their vehicles, while others are trading in their Teslas or opting for other EV models.
The company’s executives have said Tesla will return to growth this year despite the first annual sales decline in more than a decade in 2024. Last year the company pushed a number of end-of-year deals in an attempt to boost its 2024 numbers. Tesla’s 2025 outlook didn’t include specific figures, nor did it repeat a prediction Musk had given in October for a potential 20% to 30% growth in sales.
Tesla is also contending with an increasingly older EV lineup as it works toward an expected start of production of more affordable models in the first half of this year, however details on the upcoming vehicles are limited. The EV maker is expected to lose several weeks of output this quarter as it upgrades its factories to produce the redesigned Model Y, its most popular vehicle.
In addition to the supercharging and financing perks, Tesla is also advertising the federal EV tax credit, an incentive the Trump Administration has threatened, on a number of its vehicles including non-Foundation Series Cybertruck models. In June, Tesla had said it plans to stop selling its Foundation Series of the Cybertruck, which started deliveries in late 2023, “pretty soon.”
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