Tesla has quietly launched a short-term rental programme from its own showroom locations. The initiative reportedly began in early November 2025 at two California locations (San Diego and Costa Mesa) and is aimed at offering Tesla models for three-to-seven-day rentals with pricing starting at US$60 per day for certain models.
The move comes against a backdrop of falling vehicle sales in the U.S., following the end of the federal $7,500 EV tax credit and growing inventory pressure. By renting its own product, Tesla appears to be experimenting with new ways to engage drivers, reduce unsold stock, and perhaps convert rental drivers into buyers.
Users reporting via Reddit note that these rentals include not just the vehicle, but added perks: “unlimited free Supercharging” across Tesla’s network during rental, plus access to Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving (Supervised)” feature. There is also a buy-conversion incentive: renters who purchase a Tesla within a week of the rental reportedly receive a $250 credit toward the purchase.
From Tesla’s perspective, this isn’t framed as competing with traditional rental firms. Instead, Redditors and reporting view it as a longer term test-drive strategy, getting potential buyers behind the wheel for more than a typical 30-minute showroom spin. The idea: experience the car in real-world conditions, charge it at Tesla Superchargers, try FSD, then decide to buy.
Renting through its own showrooms gives Tesla several strategic advantages: direct control over the experience, access to its charging network, exposure to FSD usage data, and an alternative way to monetise idle inventory.
Why Tesla Is Doing This—Context of the Sales Slump
Multiple Reddit commenters tie this tactic to Tesla’s declining U.S. sales. One Reddit user observes:
“They’re renting them for $60+ per day for 3-7 day stints… unlimited mileage in California… free Supercharging and FSD while you have it.” (Reddit)
With the EV tax credit having expired, many buyers who previously committed to Tesla purchases may now pause or shop elsewhere. Tesla’s inventory may therefore be accumulating and renting offers a way to convert inventory into cash flow or sales leads rather than letting vehicles sit idle. Additionally, by putting cars “on the road” as rentals, Tesla gets data, FSD miles, user stories, etc. which may help their longer-term ambitions in autonomy and robotaxi services.
The Reddit commentary also offers cautionary notes: EVs in rental use have historically faced challenges (charging logistics, maintenance, depreciation). One user wrote:
“$60/day seems steep and EVs suck for many rental use cases… It’s why Hertz got fucked over by Tesla.” (Reddit)
That refers to the earlier experience of rental giant Hertz Global Holdings, which struggled with a large Tesla fleet due to high servicing costs and resale/value challenges.
In summary, Tesla’s move into short-term car-rental through its showrooms appears to be a creative response to softer sales and shifting market conditions. By offering models for 3-7 day rentals at around $60 per day (with perks like unlimited Supercharging and FSD), Tesla is effectively turning its unused inventory into both a revenue stream and a marketing tool designed to convert renters into buyers.
However, significant challenges remain: EV charging logistics, rental wear and depreciation, brand perception, and the scalability of the model. Reddit commentary reflects both intrigue (“I’d rent one”) and scepticism (“just an act of desperation”). Ultimately, what will matter is execution and outcomes particularly whether rental customers convert at meaningful rates, how Tesla manages vehicle lifecycle and costs, and whether this evolves from a limited “test drive” initiative into a lasting business model.
If it succeeds, this may mark a strategic pivot for Tesla not just as a car-seller, but as a mobility-platform operator. If it stumbles, it may simply highlight the complexities of blending rental, sales and autonomous ambitions under one roof.




