Tesla has postponed its highly anticipated Signature Edition delivery event that was scheduled for May 12 at the Fremont factory. The company sent a brief email to attendees today — just three days before the event — offering no explanation and no new date.
The last-minute postponement is leaving buyers who already spent thousands of dollars on plane tickets and hotel reservations holding the bag.
A two-sentence email for a $159,420 event
Tesla’s email to invitees, which was shared on social media by Brooks Weisblat of DragTimes, reads in its entirety: “The Signature Edition Delivery Event scheduled for May 12, 2026, has been postponed. We apologize for any inconvenience.”
That’s it. No reason given, no rescheduled date, no mention of reimbursement for travel costs.
Brooks from Drag Times, who had already booked flights and accommodations, posted on X: “Spent thousands on this trip… @Tesla.”
He’s far from alone. The event was invite-only for the 350 buyers who ordered the limited Signature Edition vehicles — 250 Model S and 100 Model X units priced at $159,420 each. Many of these buyers have taken time off and booked travel from across the country to attend what Tesla billed as “an invite-only celebration of the first of the last deliveries of Model S and Model X Signature Edition — ever.”
Owners in the replies were not kind. One wrote that Tesla should “compensate owners or hold the event on the originally planned date.”
Tesla’s pattern of last-minute event changes
This is far from the first time Tesla has pulled the rug on a scheduled event. When the company was preparing to deliver the first Model S Plaid in 2021, it delayed the delivery event by a week because Elon Musk said it needed “one more week of tweak.” Tesla also pushed back the Robotaxi unveiling from August to October 2024 to allow more time to build prototypes.
But those delays came with at least some explanation. This time, Tesla gave its highest-spending customers — people who just paid $159,420 for a collector’s car and signed a no-resale agreement with a $50,000 penalty — nothing more than a generic two-sentence apology.
The timing makes the lack of communication even worse. Three days’ notice is not enough to cancel or change most airline bookings without penalties. Some attendees were likely already in transit or had already arrived in the Bay Area.
What happens next?
Tesla hasn’t said when the event will be rescheduled. The company also hasn’t indicated whether the postponement affects the actual delivery timeline for the Signature Edition vehicles, or if buyers will still receive their cars on or around the original schedule.
As we reported last month, Tesla confirmed that Model S and Model X production is over, with the Fremont factory line being converted to manufacture Optimus humanoid robots. The Signature Edition was supposed to be the grand farewell — a sunset celebration at the factory where the Model S first rolled off the line in 2012.
For, the sunset got postponed. No reason, no new date, and a lot of people out a lot of money on nonrefundable travel.
Electrek’s Take
This is embarrassing. Not a great look for Tesla. These are Tesla’s most dedicated enthusiasts, people who were specifically invited to spend $159,420 on a numbered collector’s vehicle. They signed restrictive no-resale agreements with $50,000 penalties. They booked cross-country flights. And Tesla rewarded that loyalty with a two-sentence email three days before the event.
The complete lack of explanation is what makes this particularly bad. If there’s a legitimate reason — a production delay on the vehicles, a logistics issue at the factory, a permitting problem — Tesla should say so. These buyers would likely understand. What they don’t understand, and shouldn’t have to accept, is radio silence from a company that just took $160K from each of them.
At a minimum, Tesla should reimburse nonrefundable travel costs for attendees who booked based on the original invitation. That’s basic customer service for a product at this price point. Whether Tesla will actually do that is another question entirely, the company doesn’t even have a PR department to field complaints.
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