Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Tesla reaches production milestone, now ‘a real car company’

Add as a preferred source on Google
Tesla Model 3
Miles Branman/Digital Trends

Tesla had a difficult time ramping up production of the Model 3, its long-awaited entry-level model. Chief executive Elon Musk repeatedly called the situation “production hell” but there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. The company has finally reached its goal of building at least 5,000 examples of the car in a week.

“I think we just became a real car company,” a jubilant Musk wrote in an email sent to employees and obtained by Reuters.

Recommended Videos

The firm promised it would reach the 5,000-car-per-week milestone by the end of the second quarter of 2018. It barely missed the deadline, according to two anonymous workers. They reported the 5,000th car rolled out of the Fremont, California, factory at about 5 a.m. local time on Sunday morning, so merely five hours late. Tesla nonetheless achieved an all-time production record by making a total of 7,000 cars in seven days. That number includes the 5,000 Model 3s, plus the usual run of the Model X and the Model S.

Tesla later released production figures for the second quarter of 2018. It manufactured 53,339 cars between April and June. 28,578 of those were Model 3s, while the remaining 24,761 balance represents the Model S and the Model X. The company notes this was the first quarter during which it built more Model 3s than the S and the X combined. We expect this trend will continue in the foreseeable future.

“We did it! We either found a way or, by will and inventiveness, created entirely new solutions that were thought impossible. Intense in tents. Transporting entire production lines across the world in massive cargo planes. Whatever. It worked,” Musk wrote.

The responses to the announcement have been all over the board. Some praised Musk and his team for pulling off a feat that looked utterly impossible a few short weeks ago. Reservation holders waiting for the Model 3 welcomed the news like a Christmas basket. Steven Armstrong, the head of Ford’s European division, pointed out his firm makes 7,000 cars every four hours. It’s the latest blow in a Twitter spat that started when Musk called Ford a morgue.

On a more serious note, analysts question whether Tesla can continue to build 5,000 Model 3s a week in the foreseeable future or if this was just another build burst to impress investors. Reaching that goal required building a tent outside of the factory to house an all-new assembly line, pulling workers away from the Model S and Model X production lines, and running two 12-hour shifts every day of the week. Anonymous employees said Tesla went as far as staggering breaks to ensure the line never stopped moving.

“Reaching [the milestone] is one thing. Consistently producing 5,000 per week with outstanding quality is another,” said Dave Sullivan, AutoPacific’s manager of product analysis, in a statement sent to Bloomberg.

Musk isn’t concerned; he hinted Tesla might bump Model 3 output to 6,000 units a week by the end of August.

Update: Added Q2 production figures.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Volkswagen is bringing back the electric ID.Buzz bus with some cool upgrades for 2027
Until pricing and range are addressed, the upgrades feel like progress on everything except the things that actually held buyers back.
VW ID.Buzz exterior.

Volkswagen skipped the 2026 model year for the ID.Buzz entirely, a move that raised eyebrows and triggered the predictable “is the electric bus dead?” conversation. Well, it isn’t dead after all. The automaker has officially confirmed the 2027 ID.Buzz.

It’s arriving with the kind of updates that suggest Volkswagen actually listened to what early owners and reviewers were saying. The headline addition is the Tourer 4Motion, a new trim that turns the electric bus into a legitimate electric camper. 

Read more
After acing range and charging, Chinese EV brands flaunt three-wheel driving on SUVs
BYD, Aito, and Li Auto are making active suspension the new battleground after range and charging
Machine, Wheel, Transportation

Chinese EV brands have spent years trying to win on range, charging speed, and screens. Now the fight is getting stranger, with premium SUVs showing off three-wheel driving as the next battleground.

According to Car News China, BYD’s Denza B8 Flash Charge Edition, Huawei-backed Aito M9, and Li Auto L9 are all being used to show how active suspension can lift a wheel while the vehicle keeps moving at low speed. The demos look theatrical, and the intended uses are practical, including tire changes, off-road recovery, and crossing uneven ground without getting stuck.

Read more
This Android Auto update is trying to change how you drive and use your car
Road, Electronics, Credit Card

I use Android Auto every day, and at this point, it feels like a quiet co-driver sitting on my dashboard. That’s exactly why this upcoming refresh from Google actually matters. It is not just a visual tweak; it is a proper overhaul of how Android Auto should feel inside a modern car. The biggest change is the design. Google is bringing its Material 3 Expressive design language from phones into cars. That means Android Auto is getting a more modern, more fluid look with expressive fonts, smoother animations, and even support for wallpapers. This should really make the entire interface feel less rigid and more alive while you are driving.

Widgets finally make Android Auto feel useful at a glance

Read more