Tesla · TechCrunch AI
Tesla just increased its spending plan to $25B — here’s where the money is going
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Tesla CEO Elon Musk kicked off the company’s first-quarter earnings call with a monetary heads-up — or depending on the mindset of the investor, a warning.
Key facts
- This $5 billion uptick suggests these initiatives will require more money than previously planned
- At the end of the first quarter, Tesla reported $44.7 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments
- With 2026 we’re going to be substantially increasing our investments in the future,” Musk said in the earnings call Wednesday
- All of this spending, which CFO Vaibhav Taneja said will last a couple of years, comes with a literal cost
Summary
That figure, which covers what Tesla plans to spend on physical assets outside of its day-to-day operating expenditures, is three times higher than its annual capex budget in previous years. Tesla had announced in January that it expected capital expenditures to be in excess of $20 billion in 2026, already a substantial increase meant to cover its AI initiatives, including investments in compute infrastructure and data centers, and the expansion and ramp of its manufacturing and R&D production lines, among other items. This $5 billion uptick suggests these initiatives will require more money than previously planned. Of course, Musk views this as a positive, a sentiment many other shareholders will likely also share since it positions Tesla as a company investing in its future, namely AI and robotics.