Tesla has officially ended production of the Model S and Model X at its Fremont Factory in California, marking the end of two vehicles that helped redefine the modern automotive industry.

The final Tesla Model S rolled off the production line this past weekend, shortly after the last Model X was completed. Tesla confirmed the milestone on X by sharing photos of the final vehicles surrounded by Fremont employees, bringing an emotional close to more than a decade of flagship EV production.
For many longtime Tesla fans, this moment represents far more than the end of two vehicle programs. The Model S and Model X were the products that transformed Tesla from a risky startup into one of the world’s most influential automakers.
The last Model S & the last Model X have been produced at Fremont Factory
— Tesla (@Tesla)
14 years of history for Model S, 11 years for Model X
🫡 pic.twitter.com/5sSscIe1f3
The Tesla Model S Changed the EV Industry Forever
When Tesla launched the Model S in 2012, the electric vehicle market looked completely different than it does today. EVs were still viewed as slow, impractical, and limited to small city cars with short driving range.
The Model S completely changed that perception.
Tesla introduced a premium electric sedan capable of long-distance driving, blistering acceleration, cutting-edge software, and over-the-air updates that continuously improved the vehicle after purchase. Combined with access to Tesla’s rapidly expanding Supercharger network, the Model S proved that electric cars could outperform traditional gasoline vehicles in both technology and driving experience.
Over the years, the Model S evolved into one of the quickest production cars in the world, especially after the arrival of the Plaid variant. Its combination of speed, range, minimalist design, and software integration helped establish Tesla as the leader in the EV space.
More importantly, the Model S forced the entire auto industry to take electric vehicles seriously.
Model X Helped Popularize Electric SUVs
Tesla expanded its lineup in 2015 with the launch of the Model X, bringing many of the Model S innovations into the growing SUV segment.
The Model X quickly became known for its distinctive Falcon Wing doors, futuristic interior, panoramic windshield, and impressive performance for a large family SUV. At a time when very few automakers were building fully electric SUVs, Tesla pushed the segment into the mainstream years ahead of its competitors.
The vehicle also demonstrated that EVs could combine practicality, luxury, performance, and advanced driver-assistance technology in a single package.
While some critics questioned the complexity of the Falcon Wing doors, the feature became one of Tesla’s most recognizable design signatures and helped the Model X stand out in a crowded luxury SUV market.
Why Tesla Ended Model S and Model X Production
Although the news is significant, the decision was not entirely unexpected.
Earlier this year, Tesla CEO Elon Musk revealed that production space at the Fremont Factory would eventually be repurposed for manufacturing Tesla’s humanoid robot project, Optimus.
Tesla had already started quietly winding down the Model S and Model X programs in recent months. The company stopped accepting custom orders for both vehicles and shifted to inventory-only sales before launching ultra-limited Signature Edition versions.
Those Signature Edition vehicles, limited to just 350 combined units between the Model S and Model X, reportedly sold out in less than a week despite pricing reaching approximately $160,000 each.
The Legacy of the Model S and Model X
While the Tesla Model 3 and Model Y eventually became the company’s high-volume global products, the Model S and Model X built the foundation that made Tesla’s rapid growth possible.
These vehicles proved that electric cars could be:
- Fast
- Desirable
- Luxurious
- Long-range
- Software-driven
- Technologically advanced
Before Tesla, most automakers treated EVs as compliance projects or niche experiments. The success of the Model S and Model X accelerated the entire industry’s transition toward electrification and forced legacy automakers to rethink their long-term strategies.
Today, nearly every major automotive brand is investing heavily in electric vehicles — a shift many industry analysts trace directly back to the success of Tesla’s early flagship models.
What’s Next for Tesla?
With the Model S and Model X now officially discontinued, Tesla’s future product focus appears centered on high-volume manufacturing, robotics, artificial intelligence, and autonomous driving technology.
The company continues to prioritize the Model 3 and Model Y globally, while also expanding production of the Cybertruck and preparing for future next-generation vehicle platforms.
At the same time, Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot project is becoming increasingly important to the company’s long-term vision, especially as Tesla invests more factory resources into AI-powered robotics manufacturing.
Even as Tesla moves into its next phase, the legacy of the Model S and Model X will remain deeply embedded in automotive history.
They were more than just vehicles — they were the products that proved the electric future was possible.
