Cybertruck Buyer's Guide

The polarizing pickup, demystified. Real specs, real range, real ownership concerns.

Quick reality check

The Cybertruck is unlike any other Tesla. 48V electrical architecture, NACS native, steer-by-wire, stainless body, no traditional service network. If you're considering one, the buying calculus is very different from a Model Y. This page covers the honest pros and cons.


The trim lineup

Trim
Range (EPA)
0-60 mph
Tow capacity
MSRP at launch
RWD (single motor)
~250 mi
~6.5 sec
7,500 lb
$61,000
AWD (dual motor)
~320 mi
4.1 sec
11,000 lb
$80,000
Cyberbeast (tri-motor)
~320 mi
2.6 sec
11,000 lb
$100,000

Range Extender: Tesla offers an aftermarket "Range Extender" battery pack that slots into the bed, adding ~120 miles to AWD/Cyberbeast trims for $16k. It takes up ~30% of the bed and weighs 600 lbs. Mixed reviews on practicality.


What's genuinely different about Cybertruck

48V electrical architecture

Every Tesla before Cybertruck used 12V for everything outside the high-voltage battery. Cybertruck switched to 48V — the first production car to do so. Benefits:

The downside: 12V accessories don't directly work. Auxiliary lights, dashcams, ham radio gear, trailer wiring — all need 48V-to-12V converters. The aftermarket is catching up but it's not the plug-and-play world of Model 3/Y.

Steer-by-wire

The steering wheel has no mechanical connection to the front wheels. Computer reads wheel angle, motors turn the tires. Combined with rear-wheel steering, this gives the truck a remarkably tight turning radius for its size.

Stainless body panels

Cold-rolled 30X stainless steel. The body has no paint — what you see is the metal.

NACS native (no adapters needed for Superchargers, obviously)

Standard for Tesla but worth noting. Cybertruck also gets V4 Supercharger access where available — up to 350 kW peak charging.


Real-world ownership realities

Range is highly variable

Cybertruck's massive frontal area and weight make range very payload-sensitive:

Towing reality

If you plan to tow regularly, the Cybertruck's tow capacity (11,000 lbs) is class-leading but the practical range while towing is the lowest of any 3/4-ton pickup option. A 2-hour towing trip becomes 4 hours with charging stops. Many traditional pickup buyers find this unacceptable.

Service is sparse

Charging infrastructure


Known issues (early production)

Tesla has had several recalls and known issues with the Cybertruck since launch in late 2023:


Used market reality (as of 2026)

The used Cybertruck market is unique:

If you're shopping used


Should you buy a Cybertruck?

Honest take:

Yes, if:

No, if:

For most current Tesla shoppers, a Model Y is the better buy — proven platform, cheaper, more service-friendly, plenty of cargo capacity. The Cybertruck is a statement vehicle first, a practical truck second.

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