Tesla is set to report its Q2 2026 delivery numbers today, July 2. Tesla Investor Relations’ analyst consensus (22 firms) points to an average of 406,024 vehicles (median 408,609), while Bloomberg’s more conservative consensus sits at 396,466. But that consensus figure isn’t a random guess — there’s a real geographic tug-of-war behind it. Here’s the analysis, our prediction, and what three AIs think, before the official number drops.
Why 406,000? Europe Is Covering for a Weak US Market
Deutsche Bank analyst Edison Yu wrote that “international strength is doing the heavy lifting” this quarter — Europe is projected to grow nearly 40% year-over-year, followed by China at +3%. But domestically, the picture is very different: Cox Automotive projects Tesla’s US sales will drop roughly 20% YoY, shrinking its US market share to just ~2.9% — a direct hit from the expired $7,500 federal EV tax credit.
So the 406,024 figure is really a story about Europe and China patching a hole in the US market, not broad-based growth. If hit, it would mean just 5.7% growth over the 384,122 vehicles delivered in Q2 2025 — a modest recovery after two straight years of annual decline.
Tesla’s Delivery Trend: The Last 8 Quarters
This quarter’s number can’t be read in isolation — it sits inside a year of real volatility:
Source: Tesla official SEC 8-K delivery filings per quarter; Q2 2026 = Tesla IR analyst consensus (not yet official).
The volatility is stark: Q1 2025 crashed to 336,681 units as Tesla retooled Model Y production across all four global factories simultaneously. After recovering, Q3 2025 spiked to a record 497,099 units as buyers rushed to lock in the $7,500 tax credit before it expired. The effect was immediate: Q4 2025 fell 16% YoY to 418,227 units as post-incentive demand normalized. Q2 2026 is now a test of whether Tesla can hold steady in the 400K range without incentive-driven demand pulls.
Writer’s Prediction: 409,000 Units
Close to the Tesla IR median, with modest upside room after Deutsche Bank flagged deliveries “tracking above consensus” this quarter. Hitting this would mark Tesla’s first back-to-back quarter of YoY growth after two years of annual declines — but propped up by Europe/China, not a US market recovery.
AI Prediction Panel
We asked three AI models to predict the actual delivery figure (informational only, not investment advice):
| Claude | 409,500 units |
| GPT | 410,000 units |
| Gemini | 417,500 units |
TSLA Stock Context
Tesla shares traded at $426.04 (up 1.29%) as of the July 1, 2026 close, sitting mid-range within its 52-week band of $288.77–$498.83. Today’s delivery report is a key near-term catalyst — markets will measure the actual print against the 406,024 consensus as the benchmark for the post-report price reaction.
The Verdict
All three AIs predict Tesla will beat the Tesla IR consensus (406,024) and land well above Bloomberg’s more cautious 396,466 estimate. Gemini is the most bullish, tracking close to Goldman Sachs’s high-end 420,000 call. But a big headline number doesn’t automatically mean “healthy” — if growth is entirely propped up by Europe/China while the US keeps weakening, that’s a structural shift signal, not just a seasonal rebound.
Quick Facts & Context
- Timeline: Delivery numbers land July 2, 2026; full Q2 earnings follow July 22, 2026, after market close.
- Expected breakdown: ~392,600 Model 3/Y + ~13,000 other (Cybertruck, Model S/X, Semi).
- Competition: BYD is expected to deliver roughly 557,000 EVs in the same quarter — far outpacing Tesla.
Note: AI predictions and technical data are informational only, not investment advice.

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