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by earl 5232 days ago
since I was unaware:

Tesla S seems to practically cost (with the large battery that still only gets you 300 miles) $70K after a $7.5k tax credit [1] and the Nissan leaf costs $35K but that seems to be before the $7.5k tax credit.

[1] http://www.teslamotors.com/models/options

[2] http://www.nissanusa.com/leaf-electric-car/index#/leaf-elect...

2 comments

The Leaf claims 100 miles on a charge, making its range a little less than the base Model S. That means that the Tesla costs about $19k more in practice. Considering it's supposed to be a "nicer" car in general, that doesn't seem too unreasonable.

I don't think Nissan genuinely expects anyone to buy the base model Leaf. For $2,000, you give up the ability to charge your car in minutes rather than hours (and, apparently, to use any of the charging stations that are supposed to materialize in the near future).

The Leaf's claimed range is based on an urban driving cycle, and its numbers are not comparable to the numbers Tesla publishes.
Correct, on the page you linked there's a 'view pricing details' link at the bottom.

For base model it's $27,700 net value*, after tax savings; starting at MSRP $35,200, with federal tax savings from 0 to $7,500.