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6-seater Model Y for the US? Musk says it may not happen..

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Max McDee, 22 August 2025

Tesla

For American families hoping for a more spacious electric car, Tesla CEO Elon Musk delivered a familiar dose of whiplash. He finally acknowledged the existence of a larger, six-seat version of the popular Model Y, only to suggest in the next breath that it might never reach US production, all thanks to a self-driving future that remains stubbornly in the future.

The vehicle in question is the Model YL, a longer version of Tesla's best-selling electric car that recently launched in China. Given the Model Y's monumental success and the ravenous appetite for three-row SUVs in the United States, bringing the larger variant to America seems like the most obvious business decision since selling umbrellas on a rainy day.

6-seater Model Y for the US? Don't sell your minivan just yet...

Fans of the brand have been asking, and for a fleeting moment, they got an answer. Responding to a query on the social media platform X, Musk gave a tentative timeline, stating that US production for this variant wouldn't begin until the end of next year.

But in a stunning display of either long-term planning or a complete reality disconnect that might leave potential customers dizzy, Musk immediately followed up his production estimate with a massive caveat. "Might not ever," he added, "given the advent of self-driving in America."

This variant of the Model Y doesn’t start production in the US until the end of next year.

Might not ever, given the advent of self-driving in America.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 20, 2025

The logic, it seems, is that once Tesla's Robotaxi network is fully operational, the very concept of a family needing a larger personal vehicle will simply evaporate. Families with multiple children, sports equipment, and weekend luggage will presumably summon a fleet of autonomous Teslas instead of owning a single, practical EV.

This grand vision of a driverless utopia conveniently overlooks a few earthly details. Tesla's Robotaxi program, while barely operational in a handful of limited locations, is far from a polished, nationwide system. Every autonomous journey currently includes a human safety officer either in the driver's or passenger seat. It's that pesky detail that suggests the "advent of self-driving" might still be a few dawns away.

6-seater Model Y for the US? Don't sell your minivan just yet...

Musk's forecast also sidestepped a rather basic question posed by the very person he was responding to: "Wouldn't people with a lot of kids still want a 3-row SUV even with self-driving?" The question, so far, has gone unanswered by the CEO.

Tesla seems to be debating the philosophical need for family-sized electric cars, while its competitors are busy selling them. The market for three-row EVs is only heating up, with established players and newcomers alike offering vehicles that people can actually buy today.

6-seater Model Y for the US? Don't sell your minivan just yet...

The choice to potentially cede this lucrative segment while waiting for a world-changing technology to mature is a brave strategy. It leaves would-be buyers of a six-seat Tesla in a peculiar limbo, asked to wait for a vehicle that might be rendered obsolete by a technology that doesn't fully exist yet.

For those of you who circled late 2026 or early 2027 on their calendars - we hope you used a pencil. The promise of a larger Model Y for the American market is on the table, but it comes with an asterisk the size of a self-driving semi-truck. For now, the most concrete takeaway is the uncertainty, leaving families to decide whether to wait for Tesla's maybe-car or buy an actual three-row EV from another brand.

Source

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