Tesla reported a profitable third quarter today, as shoppers scrambled to snatch up the company’s EVs in record numbers before the federal EV tax credit expired.

Tesla said it earned $1.4 billion in net income on $28.1 billion in revenue in the quarter that ended in September. That’s 12 percent increase in revenue but a 37 percent decrease in profits over the third quarter of 2024, when the company earned $2.2 billion in net income on $25.2 billion in revenue. Tesla’s revenue came in above Wall Street expectations of $26.24 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Tesla’s operating income rebounded to $1.6 billion, with a quarter of that income coming from the sale of regulatory credits to other automakers. The company said it sold $417 million in regulatory credits, a 44 percent decrease year over year. That income, though, is expected to vanish in due course after the passage of President Trump’s budget bill, which eliminated penalties for automakers who exceed emission standards.

Tesla’s cash pile increased by 24 percent in Q3 to $41.6 billion, and free cash flow (or the amount of cash the company has generated after accounting for its day-to-day operating expenses and capital expenditures) was at just $3.9 billion.

Tesla Model Y electric vehicles (EV) at a dealership in Colma, California, US, on Tuesday, July 1, 2025.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

The company’s gross margins were in the spotlight again, as bullish investors hoped to see improvements after months of steady decline. The company reported 18 percent gross margins based on generally accepted accounting practices, slightly more than the 17.2 percent reported last quarter but down from the 19.8 percent it reported in Q3 2024.

Tesla was widely expected to have a relatively good quarter as a result of the expiration of the $7,500 federal EV tax credit on September 30th. The company sold a record number of EVs in the third quarter, delivering a total of 497,099 vehicles, a 7.4 percent increase compared to the third quarter of 2024. Tesla also sold around 50,000 more vehicles than it produced, helping reduce the extra inventory that’s been building up for the first half of the year.

But this is likely to be a rare positive quarter in an otherwise dour year for Tesla. The company reported its first year-over-year sales drop in 2024 and is expected to do the same at the end of this year, with analysts predicting an 8.5 percent decline. In addition to an aging lineup of vehicles, Tesla is also facing stiffer competition in all major markets than it ever has before. And Elon Musk’s far-right political rhetoric, and his donations and work for the Trump administration, have repelled many of the company’s liberal customers.

As the top EV seller in the country, Tesla is an obvious bellwether for the health of the market. Experts predict that sales will drop dramatically in the US after the tax credit vanishes. Musk himself has said that the company is in for “a few rough quarters” thanks to the expiring incentive and other macroeconomic factors. But he believes that Tesla will rebound as its AI plans come to fruition, including robotaxis and humanoid robots. Musk has said that 50 percent of the US population will have access to Tesla’s robotaxis by the end of 2025. So far, the vehicles are only available in Austin and San Francisco.

The sales report comes on the heels of a proposed new pay package for Musk, which if approved could make him the world’s first trillionaire. Musk would need to meet a series of ambitious milestones to receive the compensation, including producing over a million robots and a million robotaxis and creating $7.5 trillion in value for Tesla’s shareholders. Tesla is holding a shareholder meeting on November 6th to vote on the proposal.

In response, Musk bought $1 billion in Tesla stock in his first open-market purchase in over five years. It also comes a few weeks after Tesla released the latest version of its Master Plan that pivots away from the company’s day-to-day EV business in favor of a future dominated by AI and robotics.

But those shifts are likely years away — if they come at all — leaving Tesla to struggle in the current environment with an aging lineup and a battered brand image. The company is trying to juice sales with new cheaper, decontented versions of its bestselling Model 3 and Y vehicles, but investors are worried that the company will be cannibalizing its own sales.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

Share.
Exit mobile version