Tesla Reports Q2 Deliveries in Matter of Days. Here is the Key Number.
Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) will report its second-quarter vehicle deliveries in the early days of July — something that will draw attention to its ambitious businesses like robotics and humanoid robots. The most important value from the production and delivery review is likely to be the year-on-year growth rate in deliveries.
The update will be timely, as deliveries are the most accurate measure of whether demand for Tesla vehicles is recovering after the 2025 crisis — and this quarter is the first meaningful test of whether that gain has staying power.
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In 2025, Tesla will deliver 1,636,129 vehicles, down 8.6% from around 1.8 million in 2024. The first quarter of 2026 brought growth, with deliveries up 6.3% year-on-year to 358,023. But there was a problem: Tesla produced about 50,000 more cars than it delivered — a larger-than-usual gap between supply and demand that may have worried some investors.
So, can Tesla report a strong enough full-year growth rate to convince investors that a steady return to the company’s auto business is underway?
This is the threshold Tesla must fall into
Wall Street consensus calls for about 406,000 deliveries in the second quarter. Some bullish forecasts are much higher, at around 420,000. Either way will remove the most important comparison: the 384,122 cars Tesla delivered in the second half of 2025.
A move back above last year’s level would mean that Tesla has combined two straight areas of growth.
So, here’s an easy way to frame the report: A number of around 406,000 or more would definitely indicate that a meaningful recovery is on the way. A figure near or above 420,000 would suggest that momentum is building faster than expected. But a return to last year’s 384,122 would support the bear’s case, indicating that the first-quarter jump was short-lived and that demand is not keeping up with Tesla’s production.
Where the number is determined
While Tesla did not break out regional deliveries in its quarterly production and delivery updates, regional performance will be key to the overall figure.
Europe is reported to have recently turned from a weak point to a source of growth for the company; Tesla’s new car registrations there doubled year-over-year in May, a sharp reversal from a projected decline in 2025. China, Tesla’s second largest market, is also reportedly holding up well, helped by the refreshed Model Y.


