News

by Stephen Rivers · Carscoops · Jan 9
News
Family Wants Cybertruck Off The Roads After Teen Killed In Hit-and-Run

Cybertruck's Design Under Fire After Fatal Hit-and-Run—Safety Questions Resurface

A Connecticut family is calling for design accountability following a teen's death in a Cybertruck collision, reigniting debate over the vehicle's angular steel exoskeleton and visibility limitations. The incident adds weight to EU safety concerns that already restrict the truck's sale in Europe. Whether this sparks genuine regulatory scrutiny or becomes another flash-point in EV culture wars remains unclear.

The Cybertruck's design choices—angular panels, minimal overhang visibility, exoskeleton construction—were always a tradeoff between form and function. Tragedy doesn't retroactively make the engineering wrong, but it does expose Tesla's willingness to push safety boundaries for aesthetics.

by Neil Vorano · Electric Autonomy · Jan 9
News
Tesla Model Y Standard now available in Canada for under $50k

Tesla Model Y Standard hits $50k CAD—RWD economics finally make sense

The stripped Model Y lands in Canada with rear-wheel drive, 463 km of range, and a price that undercuts most ICE competitors at entry level. This is what happens when you stop pretending every EV needs to be fast—just functional and affordable. Market context: pricing pressure is real, and Tesla's cutting deeper into the mass market.

Sub-$50k RWD Model Y is the only Tesla that matters right now. Everything else is waiting for margin compression to hit harder.

InsideEVs · Jan 9
News
A Tiny Car Company Is Coming To America To Do What Tesla Wouldn’t

Caterham's EV Sports Car Finally Does What Tesla's Roadster Promised

While Elon's been talking about the next-gen Roadster since 2017, Caterham actually built an electric lightweight—and they're bringing it stateside with NACS. The Seven EV keeps what matters: sub-1,500 lbs, 0-60 in the mid-threes, no steering wheel nannies.

Caterham shipping the car Tesla won't finish is the most on-brand move possible: tiny British company doing the work, American giant still taking pre-orders.

by Peter Johnson · Electrek · Jan 8
News
These were the best-selling EVs in the US in 2025 outside of Tesla

Non-Tesla EV sales are finally worth watching—here's what actually sold in 2025

The Mach-E, Ioniq, and F-150 Lightning led the pack as traditional automakers clawed back market share. Ford's crossover strategy and Hyundai's pricing discipline are working. Tesla's slowing numbers opened a door everyone else is walking through.

The EV market is becoming real now that Tesla's monopoly cracked—turns out people will buy what's available if the price is honest.

Road & Track · Jan 8
News
U.S. House of Representatives May Take Up Bill Aimed at Tesla-Style Electric Door Handles

Congress Is Coming for Tesla's Door Handles—Finally

Rep. Robin Kelly's pushing legislation to mandate conventional door mechanisms after 15 alleged crash-related deaths tied to Tesla's motorized handles. It's the kind of safety theater that shouldn't need legislative muscle—mechanical reliability beats fancy engineering when lives are on the line. The Model S, Model 3, and Model Y all use the same problematic design.

Tesla spent years selling futurism as a feature while ignoring that a $2 door handle mechanism shouldn't require a rescue team to operate in an emergency.

Autocar UK · Jan 8
News
Tesla Model Y

Model Y's reign is finally being challenged—and it deserves to be

Tesla's volume leader still dominates European EV sales, but the gap is narrowing fast as real competition arrives. New entry-level variants chase affordability while the market fragments around them. When a single model can't keep the crown, you know the segment has matured.

The Model Y was the right car at the right time. Now it's just another EV trying to justify its margins against cars that actually learned from its mistakes.

by Fred Lambert · Electrek · Jan 8
News
US Congress introduces ‘SAFE Exit Act’ targeting Tesla door handles after claiming 15 deaths

Congress is finally calling out Tesla's door handles—15 deaths and counting

The House introduced the SAFE Exit Act, explicitly targeting Tesla's frameless electric door handles after a string of emergency egress failures. The bill mandates traditional mechanical backup systems on all EVs. This isn't about being anti-EV—it's about design choices that prioritize aesthetics over actual human survival.

Tesla spent years optimizing for Instagram angles while ignoring the one job a door handle has to do: let you out when it matters.

by Fred Lambert · Electrek Tesla · Jan 8
News
US Congress introduces ‘SAFE Exit Act’ targeting Tesla door handles after claiming 15 deaths

Congress takes aim at Tesla's flush door handles—safety or theater?

The SAFE Exit Act specifically targets flush electronic door handles after claims of 15 deaths, with Tesla as the obvious target. The bill frames emergency egress as a design flaw, not user error. Whether this becomes regulation or gets buried in committee says everything about how Washington handles EV safety theater.

Tesla's flush handles were always a solution looking for a problem—turns out Congress agrees, but 15 deaths and a bill probably means the handles stay longer than anyone expects.

RideApart · Jan 8
News
Tesla’s Trying to Get Its Full Self-Driving Fast-Tracked in Europe, But It Still Can't See Motorcyclists

Tesla's Pushing FSD Through Europe While It Still Whiffs on Motorcyclists

Tesla's lobbying for faster autonomous vehicle approval in Europe, but there's a problem: Full Self-Driving still can't reliably detect motorcyclists in its sensor stack. It's the kind of detail regulators should probably care about before rubber-stamping a system that claims to be ready for public roads.

Regulatory fast-tracks don't fix physics problems. If your camera-only system can't see a motorcycle, no amount of political pressure changes that.

InsideEVs · Jan 8
News
The Volvo EX60 Is Here To Show Tesla That There’s A New Range King

Volvo EX60 hits 400 miles. Tesla's got competition—finally.

Volvo's betting the EX60 can take market share from Tesla with a claimed 400-mile EPA range and a design philosophy that doesn't scream "I bought this because of tweets." The Swedish approach trades minimalism for actual usability. Whether it sticks depends on dealer network and real-world range verification.

400 miles sounds good until you remember Tesla's been there for years—the EX60 isn't winning on specs, it's winning on not being annoying to live with.

by EV Central team · EV Central · Jan 8
News
Tesla improves its warranty in Australia to five-years and unlimited km

Tesla's Warranty Play in Australia: Five Years Unlimited—Finally Matching the Category

Tesla extended its Australian warranty to five years with unlimited kilometres, a move that signals confidence in battery durability but also suggests the company's catching up to what traditional manufacturers offer as baseline. It's not a flex—it's table stakes now. The EV market's matured enough that buyers expect peace of mind, and unlimited-km coverage removes the anxiety tax that plagued early adopters.

Tesla's moving the warranty goalposts because the market demanded it, not because they invented something. Now watch how fast other EV makers match it.

InsideEVs · Jan 7
News
The Xiaomi SU7 Just Became An Even Bigger Problem For Tesla

Xiaomi SU7 Gets The Update Tesla Should've Done First

Xiaomi just dropped a mid-cycle refresh on its Model 3 competitor with faster 11.5kW charging, more power across the lineup, and a genuinely reworked interior. The SU7 is finally closing the gap on build quality and real-world usability—the things that actually matter to owners, not marketing departments.

Tesla's playing chess while Xiaomi's playing checkers and somehow winning. When your EV's main selling point isn't the EV anymore, the EV market has a real problem.

Why are you reporting this ?

Tell us more (optional)

Thanks for letting us know

Your feedback helps keep our community safe.

Would you like to take additional action?