- Canada is launching a tax credit for zero-emission vehicles on May 1.
- To qualify, the base model of a new car must sell for less than $45,000 CAD.
- Tesla vehicles will not qualify for the credit because the company's cheapest Model 3 option starts at $53,700 CAD.
Tesla vehicles will be ineligible for the Canadian government's new $5,000 electric vehicle tax credit when it takes effect on May 1.
In guidelines published Wednesday by Transport Canada, base-model vehicles with six or fewer seats must have sticker price below $45,000 CAD with allowances up to $55,000 CAD MSRP for higher-priced trims.
Tesla's cheapest car, the Model 3, starts at $53,700 in Canada, according to the company's website. The Model S and X start at $114,000 CAD and $117,000 CAD, respectively.
Other vehicles that meet the threshold for the tax credit include the Chevrolet Bolt and Volt, Chrysler's Pacifica Hybrid, Audi A3 e-tron, Ford Fusion Energi, and others. You can find the full list here.
"Canada is committed to decarbonizing the country's
By 2040, the government says, all vehicles on Canadian roads can be zero-emission.
In 2018, Tesla surpassed the limit of vehicles sold for the US' governments similar tax credit. Once the automaker passed 200,000 cars sold, the incentive was halved to $3,750 in January.
Get the latest Tesla stock price here.