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BackSlate Auto's Blank Slate EV Truck Pricing Leaked, Starting at $24,950
Slate Auto's Blank Slate EV Truck Pricing Leaked, Starting at $24,950
Developing
Ars Technica6/17/2026Automotive1 min readUnited States

Slate Auto's Blank Slate EV Truck Pricing Leaked, Starting at $24,950

Quick Look

  • Slate Auto's highly anticipated Blank Slate EV truck may start at $24,950 for the standard range model, according to a leak on the company's website.
  • The leak also revealed updated specs including a less powerful motor but a doubled tow rating.
  • Official details are expected June 24.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Slate Auto is set to formally debut its Blank Slate electric pickup truck, designed with a back-to-basics approach to reduce costs. The vehicle offers options for later conversion into an SUV or fastback.

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One of the most hotly anticipated electric vehicles makes its formal debut next week. It’s the Blank Slate, a refreshingly simple pickup truck EV designed by Slate Auto, which is trying to take some of the soaring cost out of a new car with a back-to-basics approach that means even electric windows are an optional extra. Of course, a crucial aspect of this pared-back approach is pricing.

Plenty of people are attracted to the idea of a truck with a compact footprint, no infotainment system or embedded modem, and the option to upconvert it later into an SUV or fastback. In the abstract, at least, people aren’t going to jump at the prospect of a truck with 150 miles (241 km) of range if it costs too much.

When Slate broke cover in 2025, it was targeting a price of around $20,000, assuming the $7,500 IRS clean vehicle tax credit would remain in effect, but it was abolished later that year.

Well, if a leak on the Slate website earlier is to be believed, the starting price for that standard range truck will be just $24,950. The price was live for several hours earlier today, and screenshots were posted to the Slate forums, along with some updated specifications. These include a slightly less powerful electric motor for the rear wheels—now 181 hp (135 kW) instead of 201 hp (150 kW), but a tow rating that’s been doubled to 2,000 lbs (907 kg).

That pricing and those specs are gone from the Slate website, but we’ll have official pricing and a first-ride impression on June 24.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Official pricing and first-ride impressions will be released on June 24.

    Very likely · Within days

Open Questions

  • Will the final pricing match the leaked figures?
  • How will the updated specifications affect consumer demand?
  • What is the official range for the standard model?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Ars Technica.

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