Tesla Inc. (TSLA) is fighting back against brutal sales declines in Europe with a tried-and-true strategy: lower prices. The EV maker just launched a cheaper Model 3 variant across European markets, months after introducing the same version stateside, as it scrambles to defend market share against increasingly aggressive competition.
The new Model 3 Standard is aimed squarely at budget-conscious buyers who've been drifting away from Tesla in recent quarters. And given the sales numbers coming out of Europe lately, the company needs all the help it can get.
Tesla's website now lists the Model 3 Standard at €37,970 ($44,299.60) in Germany, 330,056 Norwegian crowns ($32,698) in Norway, and 449,990 Swedish crowns ($47,820) in Sweden. For context, the same model sells for $36,990 in the U.S., where it debuted back in October. The European rollout follows Tesla's launch of a lower-priced Model Y crossover in the region last October, signaling a broader strategy to compete on price as European and Chinese automakers flood the market with cheaper electric alternatives.
Despite these challenges, Tesla stock has gained 13% year-to-date, valuing the company at $1.5 trillion.
The Numbers Tell a Rough Story
Tesla's European struggles aren't just bad—they're getting worse. In October, the company registered just 6,964 vehicles across the region, a staggering 48.5% drop from the 13,519 registrations a year earlier, according to ACEA data. Year-to-date through October, European registrations have fallen 29.6% to 180,688, down from 256,495 in the same period last year.
The pain is widespread. Sales declines hit multiple key markets including Austria, Finland, and Spain. And it's not just a European problem—Tesla's China sales also tumbled in October to a three-year low, suggesting the company is facing headwinds in its most critical international markets simultaneously.
Meanwhile, Chinese rival BYD Co. Ltd. (BYDDY) is gaining momentum in Europe, capitalizing on Tesla's weakness. Overall EV adoption in the region continues growing, which makes Tesla's declining market position even more concerning. The pie is getting bigger, but Tesla's slice is shrinking.
Betting on Full Self-Driving to Turn the Tide
Tesla isn't just competing on price, though. The company is pushing hard to launch its Full Self-Driving technology in Europe by February 2026, pending regulatory approval. If that sounds ambitious, well, it's Tesla.
To build buzz ahead of the launch, Tesla has started offering free supervised Full Self-Driving ride-alongs across Europe through the end of the year. These demonstration events are happening in major cities across Germany, France, and Italy, where Tesla employees drive while customers ride shotgun to experience the system in action under real-world conditions.
Europe's RDW, the regulatory body handling the approval process, confirmed it's working with Tesla and has backed the company's February 2026 timeline. Investor Ross Gerber recently said the latest FSD version shows clear improvements, while CEO Elon Musk has suggested Tesla could reach unsupervised autonomy with an upcoming software update.
Whether advanced driver-assistance features can offset Tesla's pricing disadvantage against aggressive Chinese competitors remains to be seen. But with sales declining this sharply, the company clearly needs a multi-pronged strategy to rebuild its European position.
Price Action: Tesla shares were up 0.20% at $455.43 during premarket trading on Friday.