By Gary S. Vasilash
When Chevrolet announced the Silverado EV last year, it said that the price for the initial work truck version would have an “Estimated MSRP staring around $39,900.”
That was for the work truck version. Get the contractors in and those who are simply looking to look cool will follow. Possibly in droves.
What does the Silverado EV 4WT work truck, which is presently in production, cost?
$79,800.
There is a forthcoming 3WT version with a decreased range from the 4WT. The 4WT has an EPA rating of 450 miles per charge.
The 3WT will be tagged at $74,800.
What is shocking is that people aren’t more shocked by this estimation being off by some 50%.
When the 2024 Chevy Equinox EV was introduced last fall, the claim Chevy made was “a starting price of around $30,000.”
Mary Barra, GM chair and CEO, said, “With the flexibility of GM’s Ultium Platform, we are bringing to market vehicles at nearly every price point and for every purpose.”
Really?
The Cadillac Lyriq is on the Ultium platform. It starts at $58,590.
The GMC Hummer EV uses it, too, and good luck finding a price for it on gmc.com. The 2022 Edition 1 model started at $112,595, and while the subsequent models are less expensive, odds are that’s a relative reduction.
Every price point for Thurston Howell III, perhaps.
Kelley Blue Book has it that the average transaction price for an electric vehicle in May was down $9,370 from the price paid in May 2022. Now it is $55,488, or a 14% decrease.
There’s the Silverado EV 4WT 50% increase.
And what expectation should there be that there will be a $30K Equinox, and if there is a $30,000 Equinox will there be a sufficient number such that it won’t be like sightings of the Loch Ness Monster (“I think I saw one. . .”)?
This just isn’t a GM phenomenon.
Ford launched the F-150 Lightning Pro in May 2022 with a starting MSRP of $39,975. By August it was $55,974. At ford.com right now it starts at $59,974.
Of course, at the top of the page for the Lightning it says in a bright blue box:
“Select Models Currently Eligible for $7,500 in Potential Federal Tax Credits.”
Let Uncle Sam mitigate the price increases.