Slate Auto, the electric vehicle startup backed by Jeff Bezos and LA Dodgers owner Mark Walter, has announced that it will officially start taking orders for its low-cost electric vehicle on June 24, ahead of the first deliveries late this year.
The company sent out emails to prospective buyers on Thursday that encouraged them to make a reservation now ahead of “preorders” starting next month, in order to get a “delivery window before non-reservers.”
Slate still has not announced the starting price for its EV, though. Previously, Slate said it would reveal final pricing in June. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The four-year-old company came out of stealth in April 2025 after TechCrunch revealed its secretive plans to build a low-cost, no-frills, customizable vehicle. Slate once touted that the base version of its EV — which can be converted from a two-seater truck to a five-seater SUV, for a price — would start at “under $20,000” with a $7,500 federal tax credit. But that credit was killed by the Trump administration and Congress late last year, and Slate has remained tight-lipped about pricing, only saying the vehicle will start in the mid-$20,000 range.
The idea of a simple EV with hand-crank windows and no paint has resonated with consumers. More than 160,000 potential customers have made refundable $50 reservations with the startup since it revealed the EV last year. As other EV startups have shown over the last decade, though, it is not easy to convert reservation holders to actual customers.
To help tackle this problem, Slate named a new CEO in March. The company is now led by former Amazon Marketplace vice president Peter Faricy. (Many of Slate’s leadership positions have been filled with ex-Amazon executives.)
Slate has also lined up some serious financial firepower to tackle the difficult task of building and shipping an EV. In April, the company announced it closed a $650 million Series C funding round, meaning it has raised roughly $1.4 billion to date.
It appears that much of that funding has come from Walter’s financial firm, TWG Global. While Bezos was involved in Slate’s initial funding, his level of involvement in successive rounds has never been pinned down. In May, TechCrunch revealed that his family office manager had stepped down from her position on Slate’s board of directors.
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