Great Gatsby
Well-Known Member
I don't think it will be that bad if the first model released hovers around 50-60k. The refreshed Model Y Launch edition was close to $60k and the world didn't end. I foresee something similar given how the new Quad was unveiled and they start with an R2 LE that is fully loaded close to $60k but the key will be releasing the cheaper variants within a "reasonable" timeframe. Given how much they are scaling production and understand the importance of this moment, I venture we'd get the R2 LE early 2026 and the cheaper variants by mid-late Q2 of that year. Fingers crossed it plays out that way anyway.We love our R1S LE and I technically reserved my R2 before it rolled out on stage as soon as the website opened. I am hoping for a factory pickup this time. That said, as much coin as I am willing to muster toward it, it will be a second vehicle (actually 4th when you consider some older vehicles the teens are driving) and I wouldn't be able to handle much above 50k.
I get they want to maximize profits and they can't do the bare bones version for 45k out of the gate, but if it comes out over 50K every headline will be about how Rivian's "$45k compact EV is actually $5xK" and the press will be pretty bad I think. ESPECIALLY if the Fords that get unveilied in a week are as cheap as they say they are going to be (that's a big IF on product and price for Ford of course)
IMO the R2 pricing needs to mirror the Bronco's pricing almost exactly which is starting at 46k, most are 50K and then you can get the loaded up 60+K. They don't have to start with the 46, but they CAN'T start with the 60+
Even if Ford pulls off a cheaper EV, that is likely competing with the EV Equinox of the world on price and not this. Personally, even if cheaper, I'd go with the R2 given how dedicated Rivian has been to improving their software, specially compared to Ford. And let's be honest, if there was a Bronco EV, it would not be at $45k to start.
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