Tesla’s Model S Plaid sedan, is an attempt by the company to jolt its luxury sales. / Tesla Elon Musk had promised redesign would be availab...
![]() |
Tesla’s Model S Plaid sedan, is an attempt by the company to jolt its luxury sales. / Tesla |
The redesign of the Model S is the latest sign that Tesla has evolved from a sprightly startup challenging incumbents with new vehicles, to an established manufacturer that also has to upgrade legacy models to keep potential buyers interested.
The Silicon Valley company late Thursday is poised to mark the delivery of a souped-up version of its luxury sedan. Mr. Musk, Tesla’s chief executive, has billed it as the quickest production car on the market. The vehicle, dubbed Model S Plaid, can accelerate from zero to 60 miles an hour in less than two seconds, Tesla says on its website, and is priced starting at around $130,000.
The revamp comes nearly a decade after Tesla launched the car, which became one of the world’s first widely sold battery-powered vehicles. But sales have slumped in recent years as the company has focused on developing more-affordable vehicles.
Deliveries of the luxury sedan and another high-end offering, the Model X sport-utility vehicle, fell to a combined 57,085 last year, from a high of more than 101,000 in 2017. Overall vehicle handoffs to customers soared nearly fivefold in that time. The launch reflects Mr. Musk’s track record of showmanship as well as missed deadlines. He has frequently talked up the vehicle, which has a name adopted from Mel Brooks’s blockbuster “Spaceballs” movie.
The car also is arriving late. Mr. Musk in January said that he expected the Model S Plaid to be in customer hands the following month, but the overhaul proved to be more difficult than expected. “It’s going to be a question of ramping supply chain and internal production processes,” Mr. Musk said in April, after output of the models S and X ground to a halt in the first quarter.
![]() |
XPeng vs. Tesla: The Race for the Best EV Tech Chinese automaker XPeng. / XPeng |
Tesla, like many automakers, has been beset by supply-chain problems that took hold during the Covid-19 pandemic, including shortages of semiconductors. The company briefly shut down its Fremont, Calif., auto plant earlier this year because of parts shortages.
“Our biggest challenge is supply chain, especially microcontroller chips. Never seen anything like it,” Mr. Musk said on Twitter earlier this month. “Fear of running out is causing every company to overorder—like the toilet paper shortage, but at epic scale.”
The company also has begun making battery cells in-house, to supplement those provided by third-party suppliers such as Panasonic Corp. Mr. Musk indicated last year that the Model S Plaid could use the larger batteries that Tesla is producing at a Silicon Valley pilot plant. However, as of April, those cells weren’t yet reliable enough, Mr. Musk said.
Mr. Musk recently said the company scrapped a higher-end version, dubbed Plaid+, which was billed as having a range of more than 520 miles. Mr. Musk attributed the move to Plaid being “just so good.” Tesla didn’t respond to a request for comment on topics including whether battery cells were a factor in its decision to cancel the Model S Plaid+.
Tesla also is refreshing the Model X, first delivered to customers in 2015. Mr. Musk said during the company’s first quarter earnings call that he expected to begin delivering the revamped Model X in the third quarter. As of Wednesday, the company’s website estimated availability for new orders early next year.
Meanwhile, the company has new cars in the works, including an electric pickup truck that Mr. Musk has said Tesla may deliver by the end of the year. Tesla also is developing a semitrailer truck that is running late, and Mr. Musk has said the company is striving to produce a $25,000 electric vehicle.