In a historic announcement that marks a definitive turning point for the global automotive industry, Tesla has officially confirmed the discontinuation of its flagship vehicles, the Model S and Model X. During the company’s Q4 2025 Earnings Call held this Wednesday, CEO Elon Musk announced that the two vehicles, which established Tesla as a dominant force in the electric vehicle (EV) market, will receive an "honorable discharge" to make way for the mass production of the Optimus humanoid robot.
The decision brings to a close a chapter of automotive innovation that began over a decade ago. The Model S, launched in 2012, and the Model X, released in 2015, were instrumental in proving the viability of long-range electric transport and cementing Tesla’s brand as a manufacturer of premium, high-performance technology. However, as the company pivots aggressively toward an autonomous future powered by artificial intelligence and robotics, these legacy platforms are being retired to free up critical manufacturing capacity at the Fremont Factory in Northern California.
While rumors of the discontinuation have circulated for years—fueled by Musk’s own admissions regarding the sentimental nature of their continued production—the official confirmation sets a strict timeline. Deliveries will cease in the second quarter of 2026, marking the final opportunity for consumers to acquire these historic machines before they are relegated to the history books and the collector's market.
The Official Announcement: An Honorable Discharge
The confirmation came during a pivotal moment in the Q4 2025 Earnings Call, where investors and analysts awaited updates on Tesla's long-term roadmap. Elon Musk, known for his bold strategic pivots, did not mince words regarding the fate of the company’s longest-running production cars.
“It is time to bring the Model S and Model X programs to an end with an honorable discharge. It is time to bring the S/X programs to an end. It’s part of our overall shift to an autonomous future.”
This statement underscores a significant philosophical shift within Tesla. For years, the company’s mission was interpreted primarily as accelerating the world's transition to sustainable energy through electric cars. While that mission remains, the methodology is evolving. The focus is shifting from personal luxury transportation to mass-scale autonomy and robotics. Musk clarified that the decision was not merely about cutting low-volume products but about reallocating vital resources—specifically the manufacturing footprint at the Fremont Factory—to the next generation of Tesla products.
According to the timeline provided, Tesla will continue to service existing Model S and Model X vehicles indefinitely, honoring warranties and maintaining parts availability. However, the sales channel is closing rapidly. Deliveries will officially stop in Q2 2026 as the remaining inventory is liquidated. Musk’s warning to potential buyers was stark and final: “When they’re gone, they’re gone.”
From Flagships to Sentimental Favorites
The writing has been on the wall for the Model S and Model X for some time, particularly as Tesla’s delivery numbers became increasingly dominated by the more affordable Model 3 and Model Y. In recent years, the S and X platforms have been what financial analysts described as "light contributors" to the company's exponential growth.
Since 2022, Tesla has consistently handed over more than 1.7 million vehicles annually to customers. Within these massive figures, the combined sales of the Model S and Model X often represented only a few percentage points of the total volume. Despite a major refresh in 2021 that introduced the controversial yoke steering wheel and the high-performance Plaid trim, the vehicles could not compete with the mass-market appeal and volume of their younger siblings.
Musk has been transparent about the diminishing strategic importance of these vehicles for several years. In 2019, he famously described their continued existence as an emotional rather than a purely logical business decision.
“I mean, they’re very expensive, made in low volume. To be totally frank, we’re continuing to make them more for sentimental reasons than anything else. They’re really of minor importance to the future.”
At the time, the automotive community viewed this as hyperbole. The Model S and X were still the technological halo cars of the brand, showcasing the absolute limit of what electric powertrains could achieve. They set records for acceleration, range, and safety that competitors struggled to match for a decade. However, as the EV market saturated and Tesla’s internal focus shifted toward the Cybercab and the Optimus project, the "sentimental" justification could no longer sustain the manufacturing complexity required to keep these legacy lines running.
The Legacy of the Model S
To understand the gravity of this cancellation, one must look back at what the Model S achieved. Before its 2012 debut, electric cars were largely viewed as glorified golf carts or compromised eco-boxes. The Model S shattered that perception. It was a luxury sedan that could out-accelerate supercars, seat up to seven people (with the optional rear-facing jump seats), and travel nearly 300 miles on a single charge—a figure that eventually grew to over 400 miles.
The Model S introduced the world to the concept of Over-the-Air (OTA) software updates, allowing a car to improve over time much like a smartphone. It debuted the massive center touchscreen that has since become an industry standard. Perhaps most importantly, it served as the launchpad for the Supercharger network, the infrastructure backbone that gave Tesla an insurmountable lead in the EV race.
Throughout its lifecycle, the Model S remained the benchmark for performance. The introduction of "Ludicrous Mode" and later the tri-motor "Plaid" powertrain proved that electric motors offered superior performance characteristics to internal combustion engines. The Model S Plaid, capable of 0-60 mph sprints in under two words, effectively ended the argument that EVs were boring. As production winds down, the Model S retires as perhaps the most influential American car of the 21st century.
The Complex Brilliance of the Model X
Following the Model S, the Model X arrived with a mission to conquer the SUV segment, but it brought with it a level of complexity that famously caused "production hell" for Tesla. Defined by its panoramic windshield and the iconic, double-hinged Falcon Wing doors, the Model X was a technological marvel that pushed manufacturing techniques to their breaking point.
While the Falcon Wing doors were often criticized for their complexity and cost, they provided the Model X with a unique identity that no competitor dared to copy. The vehicle served as the first true electric family hauler, offering significant towing capacity and seating for seven adults. Like the Model S, the Model X Plaid redefined SUV performance, offering supercar acceleration in a vehicle weighing over 5,000 pounds.
Despite their brilliance, both vehicles remained expensive to build and difficult to scale. They were manufactured exclusively at the Fremont Factory, utilizing older assembly processes that differed significantly from the streamlined, unboxed manufacturing processes developed for the Model Y and Cybertruck. By cutting these lines, Tesla is streamlining its operations to a degree previously thought impossible for a legacy automaker.
The Rise of Optimus: A New Industrial Revolution
The discontinuation of the Model S and Model X is not a contraction of Tesla’s ambitions, but rather a clearing of the deck for what Musk believes is the company's most significant product yet: Optimus. During the earnings call, Musk detailed the transition plan for the Fremont Factory, the birthplace of modern Tesla.
The production lines currently occupying the floor space for the S and X will be dismantled and replaced with manufacturing lines dedicated to the Optimus humanoid robot. The scale of this ambition is staggering. Musk stated that the goal is to produce one million Optimus units per year at this facility alone.
This pivot aligns with Musk’s recent rhetoric regarding the future of the global economy. He has argued that if a humanoid robot can perform labor effectively, the relationship between GDP and the human population decouples. During the Wednesday call, Musk reiterated his belief that Optimus will be a "major needle-mover" for the United States’ GDP.
The premise is that widespread adoption of Optimus will skyrocket productivity, driving down the cost of goods and services and theoretically enabling a state of "universal high income" for humans. By replacing high-end luxury cars with general-purpose humanoid robots, Tesla is betting that the demand for labor-saving androids will vastly outstrip the demand for $90,000 electric sedans.
Signs of the End
Retrospectively, the signs of this discontinuation were visible throughout the last year. Tesla had been making subtle moves to sunset the programs well before the official announcement. In July of last year, the company stopped taking custom orders for the Model S and Model X in European markets. This move forced customers to choose from existing inventory, a classic inventory liquidation strategy used by manufacturers preparing to close a production line.
Furthermore, the lack of significant hardware updates while the Model 3 and Model Y received "Highland" and "Juniper" refreshes respectively, signaled that internal engineering resources had been diverted elsewhere. The Model S and X were kept on life support—excellent vehicles, but static in a rapidly evolving market.
Impact on Owners and the Market
For current owners and prospective buyers, the announcement brings a mix of nostalgia and urgency. The liquidation of inventory in Q2 2026 suggests that buyers looking for a specific configuration must act immediately. Once the final custom orders are fulfilled and the inventory is cleared, the only way to obtain a Model S or X will be through the used market.
There is speculation among automotive collectors that the final run of Model S and Model X vehicles, particularly the Plaid variants, could see an appreciation in value. As the cars that defined the modern EV era, they hold a significant place in history. The "honorable discharge" designation by Musk suggests that Tesla views these vehicles as completed masterpieces rather than obsolete products.
Service and support remain a top concern for owners. Tesla has assured customers that the service network is fully equipped to maintain these vehicles for years to come. Given that the S and X share many software architectures with the high-volume Model 3 and Y, software support is expected to continue indefinitely, keeping the vehicles relevant even after production ceases.
Conclusion: The Autonomous Horizon
The discontinuation of the Model S and Model X is a bittersweet moment for the automotive world. These were the machines that forced giants like Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Audi to electrify their fleets. They proved that sustainability did not require a sacrifice in performance or luxury.
However, Tesla has never been a company to rest on its laurels. By sacrificing its "sentimental" flagships, Tesla is signaling that it is no longer just a car company. It is an AI and robotics company. The transition of the Fremont Factory from producing the cars of the future to producing the workers of the future is a symbolic and literal representation of this shift.
As the final Model S and Model X roll off the line in Fremont later this year, they will leave behind a transformed industry. The electric revolution they started is now self-sustaining. Now, Tesla turns its gaze toward a new revolution—one built on autonomy, artificial intelligence, and the metallic shoulders of Optimus.