Tesla just kneecapped its own flagship pickup: the 630-hp Cyberbeast is now $15,000 cheaper, but the “free” Supercharging and Supervised FSD that sweetened last year’s price hike are gone. Translation: lower barrier to entry, higher lifetime cost for power users.
Sticker Shock, Version 2.0
At 00:00 ET on Thursday, Tesla’s U.S. order page flipped: the Cyberbeast dropped from $114,990 to $99,990—a 13 % cut that slips the tri-motor beast under the psychologically critical six-figure line. Every other Cybertruck variant—the $79,990 rear-wheel drive and $99,990 all-wheel drive—kept its price intact, focusing attention squarely on the halo model.
What Disappeared Overnight
The price trim is not a pure discount. Tesla simultaneously deleted the “Luxe Package” it grafted onto Cyberbeast orders in August 2025. That bundle had bundled:
- Supervised Full Self-Driving (a $8,000 stand-alone today)
- Free lifetime Supercharger access (previously $4,000-equivalent perk based on 10-year average use)
Buyers who locked in before the reset still keep both perks; new orders now pay à-la-carte.
Why Tesla Is Doing This Now
Three vectors collide:
- Inventory velocity: Cyberbeast reservation holders have been converting at a slower clip than the cheaper AWD variant. A lower base price re-stimulates fence-sitters without Tesla formally admitting oversupply.
- Model Y cross-subsidy: Earlier this month Tesla launched a $41,990 AWD Model Y, cannibalizing attention inside the same budget band. Dropping Cyberbeast keeps the pickup in aspirational reach.
- Margin math: Removing bundled software and charging perks moves high-margin lines back to the options column; average selling price per vehicle may shrink, but blended margin per unit can actually rise once buyers tick FSD and Supercharger add-ons.
Developer & Owner Takeaways
The over-the-air architecture means no hardware change; every Cyberbeast ships with the same 123 kWh 4680-cell pack and 2.6 s 0-60 mph potential. Software locks now control feature access, a shift that aligns the truck with Tesla’s SaaS playbook. For developers building on the Tesla API, expect new endpoints tied to per-vehicle Supercharger billing and FSD subscription flags.
What Buyers Actually Pay
Today’s $99,990 entry quickly leaps back above $110k once typical options return:
- FSD capability: +$8,000
- 20-inch dark wheels: +$3,000
- Full self-driving computer (if not already HW4): +$1,000 retrofit estimate
Factor in $7,500 federal EV credit where eligible and effective cost lands near $104k—still cheaper than yesterday’s headline, but hardly a give-away.
Community Pulse
Reddit’s r/cybertruck saw a 600 % spike in “order” flairs within six hours of the change. Two camps dominate: value hunters celebrating sub-$100k entry, and August 2025 buyers fuming that their $114k trucks just lost $15k on paper. Tesla’s no-refund policy on delivered vehicles means early adopters eat the depreciation.
Predicting The Ripple
Watch for three follow-on moves before Q2 earnings:
- A similar de-contenting of the Model S plaid to drag its base under $90k.
- Introduction of pay-per-kWh Supercharger memberships for non-Tesla EVs, offsetting lost lifetime-plan revenue.
- Q1 delivery beat: Wall Street models 455k global deliveries; a cheaper Cyberbeast could add 3-5k incremental U.S. trucks and push Tesla over consensus.
Bottom Line
Tesla isn’t discounting—it’s repricing the Cyberbeast for volume while clawing back margin through stealth unbundling. Shoppers score a lower sticker; shareholders get a margin shield. The real negotiation starts when you click “add Full Self-Driving.”
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