EV News

Elon Musk says Model Y available with 7 seats from late 2020

Published by
Bridie Schmidt

Tesla CEO and co-founder Elon Musk says the first deliveries of the 7-seater electric Model Y will “probably” start early in the last quarter of 2020 – a full three months ahead of schedule.

Although the Model Y – even in its 5-seater form – is not yet available in Australia, US customers will soon be able to choose the 7-seater option which promises to deliver more choice for larger families wanting to make the switch to zero emissions transport.

Deliveries for the Model Y – which has drawn huge praise from auto engineer Sandy Munro – began in the US in March, but so far only the 5-seater option has been available to US customers.

Now, Musk has confirmed to the founder of Tesla blog Tesmanian that Tesla will likely begin deliveries of the 7-seater Model Y in October.

This is at least three months ahead of schedule; Tesla states on its website in all regions where the Model Y is available that the 7-seater interior option will be available in 2021 and does not allow buyers to select the option although it is visible.

With the 7-seater option, the Model Y costs an extra $US3,000 ($A4,380) on top of its base price ($US52,990 – $A77,383 converted – for the Long Range and $US60,990 – $A89,066 converted – for the Performance variant).

Source: Tesla

This third row of seats is placed between the rear wheel wells, and though at the Model Y unveil in Match 2019, a cutaway vision of the 7-seater Model Y interior showed the third row, it was with interest that we noted images of the third row in real life made their way onto social forum Reddit in September 2019.

According to notes made by the poster of the images, the third row is fixed and for extra leg room, the second row may be moved forwards to accommodate extra passengers.

News that first 7-seater Model Ys will commence deliveries in October follows the lead of the first Model Y, which was originally scheduled for a northern hemisphere summer release but that Tesla was able to bring to market at the end of the first quarter of 2020.

Recent Posts

Tesla begins production of lower cost EV, with first customer deliveries imminent

Tesla's most affordable models are now being produced with dozens of finished vehicles spotted at…

18 October 2025

“I just want what I paid for:” Tesla’s first Australian customer not happy with FSD treatment

Tesla's first EV customer in Australia is not happy with treatment on FSD, amid reports…

17 October 2025

Crisis? What crisis? The solution to our liquid fuel import problem comes from the sun

Every truck we electrify and every ICE car we replace with a bicycle reduces our…

17 October 2025

Hyundai releases its first EV priced at less than $30,000

Hyundai's latest affordable electric SUV goes on sale in China with prices starting under $A30,000.

17 October 2025

The Driven Podcast: BYD’s most affordable EV, Kia’s new van, and what’s the buzz around VW’s GTX

BYD’s cheapest EV lands in Australia, Kia teases its PV5 van, and VW’s ID. Buzz…

17 October 2025

Chery confirms Australian release of Jaecoo J5 electric SUV in 2026

Chery will launch the Jaecoo J5 in Australia early next year, a new compact SUV…

17 October 2025