On the Dash:
- Tesla delivery forecasts for 2026 have dropped, signaling potential inventory adjustments and regional sales pressures.
- Weak uptake of new lower-priced variants and loss of EV tax credits could affect dealer incentives and consumer demand.
- Dealers should closely monitor Tesla’s capital expenditures and product innovation, as self-driving and robotics efforts may influence its long-term market positioning.
Tesla is facing a potential third consecutive year of declining vehicle deliveries, as analysts cut growth forecasts amid rising capital expenditures and slower-than-expected consumer demand.
Wall Street had expected Tesla to rebound in 2026, but forecasts have more than halved, dropping to about 3.8% growth from 8.2% in January. Some analysts, including Morgan Stanley and Morningstar, now project outright declines, citing the loss of U.S. EV tax credits, increased competition in Europe, and weak adoption of Tesla’s stripped-down, lower-priced Model 3 and Model Y variants. Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein estimates deliveries could fall nearly 5% this year.
The EV maker plans to double its capital expenditures to over $20 billion, a shift that is expected to push the company into negative free cash flow of roughly $5.19 billion in 2026, according to LSEG data. Morgan Stanley anticipates Tesla could burn more than $8 billion as it invests in robotaxis, humanoid robots, and self-driving software. The company ended 2025 with $44.06 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and investments, and CFO Vaibhav Taneja said additional funding could come from debt or internal resources.
Tesla deliveries fell in 2024 due to high borrowing costs, an aging lineup, and weak reception of the Cybertruck, with declines continuing in 2025 amid backlash over CEO Elon Musk’s political associations. Efforts to boost demand with lower-priced versions of the Model 3 and Model Y have so far fallen short. Sales in Europe show tentative stabilization, while China-made vehicle sales climbed for the fourth consecutive month in February.
Falling deliveries placed added pressure on Musk to deliver fully autonomous driving software and robotics innovations, which underpin Tesla’s $1.5 trillion valuation. The company lost its position as the top EV maker to China’s BYD in 2025, and its shares have dropped more than 20% since hitting an all-time high in December.
Despite short-term setbacks, analysts and investors remain focused on Tesla’s long-term prospects in autonomous vehicles and robotics, while closely monitoring cash flow and delivery performance.



