Why Rivian is holding the $45,000 base model R2 until ‘late 2027’
Rivian revealed the specs and pricing details for its pivotal R2 SUV on Thursday, and the company also finally answered a long-burning question: When will customers be able to buy the promised $45,000 base model?
That answer is “late 2027,” according to the company’s press materials.
The language Rivian uses now is that the base model R2 will be “starting around $45,000.
” That’s a notable change from how the company was recently promoting that the R2 would be “starting at $45,000″ on its website. ) This is not exactly surprising.
Also, a lot has changed since Rivian first revealed the R2 in March 2024.
The $7,500 federal EV tax credit is gone.
Legacy automakers have stopped buying regulatory credits from companies like Rivian, effectively ending a stream of what was ostensibly free money pouring into its coffers. President Trump’s chaotic tariffs have increased the cost of components and materials Rivian uses to make its EVs. In some ways, Rivian has bigger challenges to deal with.
Sales of its R1T pickup truck and R1S SUV declined in 2025.
Rivian is projecting sales of between 20,000 and 25,000 R2s by the end of 2026.
If it succeeds, only Tesla’s Model Y would have reached 20,000 in sales faster.
The true base model will only reach about 275 miles.
Rivian told TechCrunch the two Standard models share the same rear-wheel-drive propulsion but declined to say whether there are other differences beyond the battery capacity that could explain the price difference. It also declined to comment on its upselling strategies. “We have made significant internal engineering, development and business efforts to reach our target price. We engineered out complexity by moving to a zonal electrical architecture, reducing the number of electronic control units, and utilizing our in-house drive units,” the company said in a statement.
It also has some light echoes of the controversy Tesla waded into a few years ago.
Elon Musk and his company had spent years promising the Model 3 would cost $35,000.
Another Tesla vehicle was once announced with an attractive price that never materialized: the Cybertruck.
Tesla first pitched the steel-clad pickup in 2019 as starting at just $40,000.
It seems unlikely that the R2 would break as bad as the Cybertruck did for Tesla.
But only the next few years will tell whether the R2’s base model winds up with a life that’s more like the $35,000 Model 3, or the Cybertruck, or something completely different
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: