today:
64
yesterday:
422
Total:
1,747,853

Business Info

Irvine's tourism information is coordinated through the Destination Irvine program run by the Chamber of Commerce. The program provides information on Irvine as a place to vacation and as a destination for meetings, events and other business initiatives. Irvine has been rated one of the top cities for start-up businesses and its strong, fast-growing economy helped place Orange County as one of the top ten fastest growing job markets.

Months-old Tesla Model 3s with only a few hundred miles on the clock are selling for around A$130,000 ($91,000) or higher in Australia, more than one-third above the price of a new one. 

That’s because the delivery time for a brand-new model is so long Down Under — up to nine months — that buyers are losing patience. They’re paying huge premiums to skip the queue, even if it means settling for a second-hand car.

A cocktail of industry disruptions is turning the traditional pricing model on its head. Supply-chain snags stemming from Covid-19 lockdowns are delaying auto shipments worldwide. At the same time, surging gasoline prices triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has buoyed demand for cheaper-to-run EVs.

Waiting Patiently

Consumers in Australia face longer delivery times for a new Tesla Model 3 than in many other key markets

Source: Tesla website

Note: Table shows Tesla's expected delivery times for Model 3 cars in selected markets.

A top-of-the range Model 3 Performance costing A$91,600 ($64,200) ordered in Sydney today would be delivered between February and May 2023, according to Tesla’s website. That’s a longer lag than in the US, Japan and Germany, while Tesla fans in Singapore might have to wait only four weeks.

Alternatively, barely used versions of the same car are available now from several sellers across Australia for between A$130,000 and A$138,000, according to carsales.com. Demand is so high for used EVs in Australia that Lloyds Auctions can’t sell them fast enough.

“We are telling anyone who might be considering selling their EV or hybrid vehicle, the time is now and we need your vehicle,” said Kirstie Minifie, local head of marketing and design for the auction house. “We have seen second-hand electric vehicles sell for auction over the original retail price.”

 

While the value of used Teslas has also climbed in key markets such as the US, the price distortion has been especially severe in Australia, a country that has long been an EV laggard. 

The Tesla Inc. Gigafactory Ahead of Delivery Day Event
Tesla vehicles at the company’s factory in Gruenheide, Germany.
Photographer: Liesa Johannssen-Koppitz/Bloomberg

Plug-in vehicles make up only 2% of all new-car sales in Australia. Takeup is way behind the global average of 13% in the final three months of 2021, and a tiny fraction of the market share in leading adopters like China and Norway.

Even before the current supply-chain snarls, Australia’s relatively low adoption of EVs had led major carmakers to prioritize other nations for their new models. Charging stations in Australia are still a novelty and are free in many public locations such as supermarket carparks or shopping malls.

Now, both factors are pushing up prices across the country as buyers race to get their hands on used EVs.