
Hey everyone, DennisCW here! If you've been on the fence about buying a Tesla, this is your wake-up call. With gas prices surging—hitting $4, $5, or even $8 per gallon in places like Los Angeles—history is repeating itself. High fuel costs always drive demand for electric vehicles (EVs), hybrids, and plug-ins sky-high. And when demand spikes, Tesla incentives and discounts? They vanish faster than a free Supercharger spot.
We've seen this movie before. Californians, especially in LA, lead the charge (pun intended) when pump prices hurt. Right now, Tesla inventory is flatlining on the charts—not dropping much—but the deals are still solid:
I predict even bigger discounts in the next week or so if things stay quiet. But don't sleep on this—summer's coming, tax refunds are dropping (April deadlines!), and road trip season means more buyers flooding in.
Check this out, shared by @S on X:
| Vehicle | Cost to Fill/Charge | |------------------|---------------------| | 2026 Honda Civic | $84 | | Model 3 (Home) | $24–$25 | | Model 3 (Supercharger) | $39 |
People will start doing the math real quick. With gas prices potentially staying high (Trump's take: "If they rise, they rise"), EVs like Tesla make unbeatable sense.
Don't leave money on the table! Here's how:
New Teslas don't come with all-weather protection. After testing 3D Maxpider, Tesmanian, Amazon junk, and more—the winner is 3W Liners. They're in my Model X, 3, Y, and Cybertruck. Use my promo code for 25% off (under $100!) and support the channel.
I'll drop a follow-up tomorrow on potential end-of-month incentives if Tesla gets aggressive. Gas prices aren't budging, demand will surge—buy now.
What are you waiting for? Drop your thoughts below: Shopping for a Tesla? Which model? Let's chat!
Stay charged, DennisCW
Tesla enthusiast and EV expert. Sharing tips on maximizing your Tesla ownership experience.