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

Tesla’s rare Signature Edition cars come with a resale trap

A one-year resale restriction, buyback rights, and a $50,000 penalty raise the stakes for collectors

Add as a preferred source on Google
Tesla Model S red
Tesla

Tesla is putting unusual limits on some of its most expensive cars. Buyers invited to purchase the Signature Edition Model S and Model X have to agree not to resell them within the first year, and the financial hit for breaking that deal could be severe.

The agreement lets Tesla seek $50,000 in liquidated damages, or the full amount from the resale, whichever is higher. It also gives the company a chance to step in before a sale closes, either by repurchasing the vehicle under set terms or by trying to stop a title transfer.

Recommended Videos

That matters because Tesla is selling these cars as a true farewell run. It plans to build 250 Signature Edition Model S sedans and 100 Model X SUVs, all finished in Garnet Red with gold accents, white Alcantara trim, and numbered plaques. At $159,420 each, the package looks designed to attract buyers who see scarcity as part of the appeal.

The restrictions go further

Tesla’s terms don’t just ban a completed resale. They also block owners from trying to sell within the first year after delivery. If someone needs to part with the vehicle early, Tesla says it must get written notice and a reasonable opportunity to buy the car back first.

That buyback process has strings attached. Tesla would start with the original purchase price, then deduct 25 cents for every mile driven, factor in wear and tear, and subtract whatever it says is needed to bring the car up to its used-vehicle standards. Even if Tesla declines to buy it, an outside sale still needs written approval.

This isn’t the first attempt

Tesla tried a similar anti-flipping approach with the Cybertruck launch in late 2023. That policy drew backlash and eventually disappeared as supply improved and resale premiums cooled off.

This time, it has a stronger scarcity argument because only 350 of these vehicles are planned.

That doesn’t make the policy feel any less aggressive, but it does explain why Tesla is trying to lock down the early resale market.

What happens next

The bigger question is whether Tesla will actually enforce the agreement. Contract language can look tough on paper, but the more practical threat may be losing access to future invite-only purchases rather than a public legal fight.

For buyers, that turns the Signature Edition into more than a high-priced sendoff. It’s also a test of how much control Tesla thinks it can keep after the sale, and how much collectors are willing to accept in exchange for exclusivity.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Polestar forced to exit the US market. It’s a shame we won’t see its refined design anymore
Boring EVs caught a break as Americans lose Polestar
polestar-3-ev

Polestar, the Swedish EV brand controlled by China’s Geely, has been denied authorization under the US Connected Vehicle Rule. As a result, it will not be able to sell vehicles in the US from the 2027 model year onward. The company is not disappearing from American roads overnight. Polestar says it will continue selling existing US inventory of the Polestar 3 and Polestar 4, and current owners will still have access to service support. But for future models, the door is effectively closing unless something changes.

Polestar 3

Read more
The Wild West era of robotaxis is starting to end
New global rules could replace patchwork regulation with stricter safety proof for driverless fleets.
Self driving car from Waymo

Robotaxi rules have entered their first global phase. A UN vehicle standards forum has adopted the first international framework for fully autonomous vehicles, giving driverless fleets a common safety baseline across major markets.

The move lands while robotaxis are expanding from test programs into a bigger commercial race. In the US and China, private fleets more than doubled in 2025 to 8,000 vehicles across more than two dozen major cities.

Read more
Google Meet finally lands on Android Auto, giving you one less excuse to skip a meeting
Android users can now join scheduled meetings and audio calls from their car's dashboard, catching up to what iPhone users have had for months.
Google Meet on Android Auto

Android Auto is finally getting Google Meet, months after the video conferencing app made its debut on Apple CarPlay. Android users can now pull up scheduled meetings and dial recent contacts straight from their car's display instead of reaching for their phone.

How it works behind the wheel

Read more