The final days of the Tesla Model X and S are here. All bets are on the Cybercab.
It’s been looming for weeks, but now the end is near: Just a few hundred Tesla Model S and Model X vehicles remain unsold.
“All that’s left are some in inventory,” he wrote.
Musk first announced Tesla’s plan to end Model S and Model X production back in January. And the data helps explain why.
Tesla doesn’t separate S and X sales, instead combining them under “other models,” a category that now includes the Cybertruck. And those combined figures show S and X sales peaking in 2017 at 101,312 vehicles before declining to 50,850 vehicles (including Cybertruck) in 2025 — a fraction of the 1.
63 million vehicles it delivered globally last year.
In other words, their deaths were inevitable. What comes next is a bit more complicated.
Musk has said Tesla will begin producing the Cybercab this month at its factory in Austin, Texas.
A look back The Model S and X EVs have taken a backseat to the more affordable Model 3 and Model Y vehicles. But their debuts, and initial sales, marked two critical moments in Tesla’s colorful and often volatile history.
The Model S launched in 2012 as its first volume EV.
Its popularity not only changed how consumers viewed EVs, it prompted legacy automakers — long dismissive of the value of electric vehicles — to take notice.
The Model X followed in fall 2015 and was famously described by Musk as the Fabergé egg of EVs.
“I’m not sure anyone should make this car.
” The Model X was often delayed, and initially criticized for its complexity.
But it ultimately introduced the company to a new market: women.
The Model X raised Tesla’s profile, and it set the company up for its next big move: an affordable mass-produced EV.
The Model 3 had a difficult start, but it ended up catapulting Tesla into the mainstream.
The company reported in January that it sold 1.
69 million vehicles in 2025, a decrease for the second year in a row.
The figure was below analysts’ expectations of around 368,000.
Tesla is an AI company and his new gambit goes all in on that mission.
Cybercab risks The Optimus robot is one part of the Tesla AI effort. But it’s perhaps the Cybercab that best embodies, and exposes the risks of, the company’s AI-first campaign. The Cybercab was designed to be used as an autonomous vehicle without traditional controls like a steering wheel or pedals — meaning once it launches it will be without the initial backup of a human safety operator.
Although that date could slip, as so many have in Tesla’s history.
Unlike Tesla’s previous vehicles, the challenges aren’t in its production (who can forget the production hell of the Model 3). Instead, it faces a major regulatory hurdle before it can ever hit the road. Federal motor vehicle safety standards place requirements on vehicles such as having a steering wheel and pedals.
Despite improvements to FSD and limited driverless robotaxi tests in Austin, Tesla has not yet demonstrated that its software can operate reliably at scale. And that piece requires more than technical mastery.
Robotaxi operations are also tricky.
And in states like California, they also require permits to deploy and charge for rides in driverless vehicles.
Zoox received an exemption from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that allows the company to demonstrate its custom-built robotaxis, which lack pedals or a steering wheel, on public roads.
Zoox is now going through a public process to have that exemption extended to commercial operations.
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