Rivian has commenced an underwritten public offering of 75 million shares of common stock, a raise worth roughly $1.5 billion based on the stock’s recent price.
The capital raise lands just days after Rivian’s stock rallied on stronger-than-expected Q2 delivery results and a raised full-year outlook.
A ~$1.5 billion raise, timed to the rally
Rivian (Nasdaq: RIVN) announced the offering on July 6, 2026. All 75 million shares are being sold by the company, and Rivian is granting underwriters a 30-day option to buy up to an additional 11.25 million shares.
At the stock’s regular-session close of $20.14 before the announcement, the base offering would raise about $1.5 billion before fees — closer to $1.7 billion if the underwriters exercise their full option.
Goldman Sachs, Allen & Company, Barclays, J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo Securities are acting as joint book-running managers. The offering is being made under a shelf registration that became effective on April 30, 2026.
Rivian said it will use the net proceeds for general corporate purposes, including funding certain equity contributions tied to its amended loan agreement with the US Department of Energy.
The dilution problem
The raise isn’t free for existing shareholders. Rivian’s prospectus discloses roughly 1.43 billion Class A shares outstanding after the offering — about 1.44 billion if the underwriters’ option is fully exercised — which works out to roughly 6% dilution.
Rivian’s stock price crashed 11% in pre-market trading on the news at the time of writing.
That rally was substantial. Rivian’s stock had climbed roughly 15.6% over the prior week after the company topped its Q2 delivery guidance and raised its full-year outlook. Rivian delivered 12,194 vehicles in Q2, well above its 9,000-to-11,000 guidance, and lifted full-year delivery guidance from 62,000–67,000 to 65,000–70,000 units.
Why Rivian needs the cash now
The timing points straight at the R2. Rivian began customer deliveries of its more affordable midsize R2 SUV on June 9 out of its existing Normal, Illinois plant, and scaling that program is the company’s single biggest priority.
Rivian is also on the hook for equity contributions tied to its DOE loan, which the company amended earlier this year as part of financing its Georgia factory. That plant, where Rivian boosted planned capacity by 50% to 300,000 vehicles annually, is slated to eventually build both R2 and R3. DOE loan draws typically require Rivian to put up matching equity, and this raise helps cover that.
In short, Rivian is topping up its balance sheet to carry the R2 ramp and its Georgia commitments through to higher, more comfortable production volumes.
Electrek’s Take
Let’s be clear about the downside first: this is dilution, and dilution is never great news for existing Rivian investors. Anyone holding RIVN just watched roughly 6% more shares get created and a good part of last week’s rally evaporate.
But you have to give it to Rivian for being opportunistic here. The stock pumped after a genuinely strong Q2 delivery beat and a raised full-year guidance, and management took advantage of that strength to raise money at a better price than it could have a week earlier. That’s exactly what you want a cash-hungry EV automaker to do — sell equity into strength, not desperation.
The strategic logic is sound. Rivian is in the most capital-intensive stretch of its history, ramping the R2 while funding its equity obligations under the DOE loan. Raising ~$1.5 billion now buys the runway to push R2 into higher-volume production without a liquidity scare hanging over every quarter. Ultimately, we think this is a positive. A well-timed raise that de-risks the R2 ramp is worth more to shareholders long-term than the short-term hit from dilution. The question now is whether Rivian can convert that runway into the kind of R2 volumes that finally move it toward positive gross margins.
If you’re shopping for an EV like the R2, powering it with home solar is one of the smartest ways to lock in low fuel costs for years. With electricity rates climbing nearly 10% last year, home solar protects you against future rate increases. And with lease and PPA options, you can go solar with zero upfront cost and start saving immediately. If you want to find the best deal, check out EnergySage. It’s a free service with hundreds of pre-vetted installers competing for your business, so you save 20 to 30% compared to going it alone. No sales calls until you pick an installer. Get your free quotes here.
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.
Comments