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Slate’s $24,950 EV Bets Against Industry Minimalism

At a time when the average new vehicle costs nearly $50,000, Slate Auto is betting that affordability outweighs the industry’s obsession with luxury features. The startup’s new American-made electric truck enters the market at $24,950, challenging the trend of bloated pricing by stripping away everything but the essentials.

June 24, 2026770 reads0

To reach this price point, Slate removed items many drivers now consider standard, including touchscreens, stereo systems, and advanced driver-assistance tech. Instead, the cabin features a manual phone mount and hand-crank windows. While competitors like the Ford Maverick start around $30,000, Slate is positioning itself as a rare, budget-friendly alternative that favors utility over the "trimflation" currently gripping the automotive sector.

Despite its bare-bones aesthetic, the truck is engineered for a five-star safety rating and includes a 10-year, 110,000-mile powertrain warranty. Driving it reveals a vehicle that feels intentionally minimal rather than cheap, with performance that mimics a compact crossover. The truck manages a 1,550-pound payload and 2,000-pound towing capacity, powered by a 205-mile range battery. Slate plans to bolster this base model with over 200 accessories, allowing owners to customize their vehicles via a direct-to-consumer model that bypasses dealer markups.

With 180,000 reservations already on the books, the company is preparing for production at its Indiana facility. The success of this experiment rests on whether consumers truly value a lower entry price over the suite of software and sensors that have defined the modern car-buying experience. If the reservations translate into sales, Slate may have identified a segment of the market that has been ignored as automakers chased luxury margins.

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