Tesla prices in Canada (2026) for every model and trim — the Model 3 and Model Y, the luxury Model S and Model X, and the Cybertruck. The Model 3 is the most affordable Tesla in Canada, while the Model Y is the best-selling EV in the country.
Compare every Tesla trim by price, range and specs below, filter by budget or range, or compare a Tesla against rivals, check the Tesla resale value in Canada, and run the EV vs gas cost calculator before you buy.
Tesla prices in Canada start around C$39,490 for the Model 3 RWD and rise to roughly C$170,000 for the Model X Plaid and Cybertruck Cyberbeast. The best-selling Model Y starts near C$49,990, and the Model 3 is Tesla’s most affordable car in Canada.
Tesla sells the Model 3 (sedan), Model Y (compact SUV), Model S (luxury sedan), Model X (luxury SUV) and the Cybertruck in Canada, each in multiple trims (RWD, Long Range AWD, Performance and Plaid).
The Model 3 is cheaper and more efficient — better for city commuting and lower running costs. The Model Y is a taller SUV with more cargo space and an optional third row, which suits families and Canadian winter road conditions. Both share the same drivetrains and Supercharger access.
Most Tesla models exceed the federal iZEV price cap, so they generally do not qualify for the federal rebate. Some provincial programs and the lowest-priced Model 3 trims may still be eligible — always check the current price caps for your province before buying.
Tesla ranges in Canada run from about 420 km on the Model 3 RWD up to 600+ km on Long Range trims (figures are manufacturer estimates; real-world winter range is lower). Compare each trim’s rated range and price in the listing above.
Canada is one of the fastest-growing EV markets in North America with 19+ electric car models available from 32+ global brands in 2026. From affordable EVs starting under C$40,000 to premium electric SUVs and trucks above C$100,000, EV Canada is your comprehensive guide to all electric car prices in Canada, specifications, range, features and charging infrastructure. The country has 15,000+ public charging ports operated by Electrify Canada, FLO, Petro-Canada EV, ChargePoint and Tesla, and EV running costs of C$30–60 per month make them dramatically cheaper than the C$200–300 a gas equivalent burns.
EV incentives in Canada (2026): the federal iZEV program offers a point-of-sale rebate on eligible zero-emission vehicles, and provincial programs stack on top — British Columbia and Quebec offer some of the largest provincial rebates, while several provinces add discounted overnight charging rates and reduced registration fees. Price caps apply, so most rebate-eligible EVs sit in the C$40,000–65,000 bracket — check Transport Canada's eligibility list before you buy.
Top electric car brands in Canada include Tesla (Model 3, Model Y), Hyundai (IONIQ 5, IONIQ 6, Kona Electric), Kia (EV6, EV9, Niro EV), Ford (Mustang Mach-E, F-150 Lightning), Volkswagen (ID.4), Nissan (Ariya, Leaf), Polestar (2, 3, 4), and premium marques like Rivian, Lucid, BMW and Mercedes-Benz. The most affordable electric cars in Canada start under C$40,000, while the most popular models are compact SUVs in the C$45,000–60,000 bracket. Federal and provincial rebates make many of them cheaper to own than gas vehicles of similar size.
Use our trip planner to plan EV road trips with charging stops, compare any vehicles side by side, browse the used EV marketplace, and find 15,000+ charging stations across Canada. Calculate the total cost vs gas or estimate EMI for any model, or see which new EVs are launching in Canada soon. Prices are updated daily.