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Tesla Slashes Car Line-Up to Double Down on Robots and AI

The move comes after Tesla reported its first annual revenue decline since becoming a major EV player.

 

Tesla is cutting several car models and scaling back its electric vehicle ambitions as it shifts focus towards robotics and artificial intelligence, marking a major strategic turning point for the company. The move comes after Tesla reported its first annual revenue decline since becoming a major EV player, alongside a steep fall in profits that undercut its long-standing image as a hyper-growth automaker.Executives are now presenting AI-driven products, including autonomous driving systems and humanoid robots, as the company’s next big profit engines, even as demand for its vehicles shows signs of cooling in key markets.

According to the company, several underperforming or lower-margin models will be discontinued or phased out, allowing Tesla to concentrate resources on a smaller range of vehicles and on the software and AI platforms that power them. This rationalisation follows intense price competition in the global EV market, especially from Chinese manufacturers, which has squeezed margins and forced Tesla into repeated price cuts over the past year. While the company argues that a leaner line-up will improve efficiency and profitability, the decision raises questions about whether Tesla is stepping back from its once-stated goal of driving a mass-market EV revolution.

Elon Musk has increasingly projected Tesla as an AI and robotics firm rather than a traditional carmaker, highlighting projects such as its Optimus humanoid robot and advanced driver-assistance systems. In recent briefings, Musk and other executives have suggested that robotaxis and factory robots could ultimately generate more value than car sales, if Tesla can achieve reliable full self-driving and scale its robotics platforms. Investors, however, remain divided on whether these long-term bets justify the current volatility in Tesla’s core automotive business.

Analysts say the shift underscores broader turbulence in the EV sector, where slowing demand growth, higher borrowing costs and intensifying competition have forced companies to reassess expansion plans. Tesla’s retrenchment on vehicle models is being closely watched by rivals and regulators, as it may signal a maturing market in which software, AI capabilities and integrated ecosystems matter more than the sheer number of models on offer. At the same time, a pivot towards AI raises fresh scrutiny over safety, data practices and the real-world performance of autonomous systems.

For consumers, the immediate impact is likely to be fewer choices in Tesla’s showroom but potentially faster updates and improvements to the remaining models and their software features. Some owners may welcome the renewed focus on autonomy and smart features, while others could be frustrated if favoured variants are discontinued.As Tesla repositions itself, the company faces a delicate balancing act: reassuring car buyers and shareholders today while betting heavily that its AI and robotics vision will define its future tomorrow.
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