This Will Be Tesla’s Stock Price in 2030
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Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA | TSLA Price Prediction) just reported its strongest quarter in years. The EV maker delivered Q1 2026 EPS of $0.41 against a $0.36 consensus, with automotive gross margin expanding to 21.1% from 16.2% a year earlier and operating income up 135.8% YoY.
Services and FSD revenue jumped 42% YoY to $3.75 billion, with 1.28 million active FSD subscriptions, up 51%. Yet shares sit at $409.99, down 8.83% year to date. Can this stock reach $650 by 2030?
What’s Holding Tesla Back Right Now
The narrative has soured fast. Tesla is down 7.87% in the past week and 8.83% YTD, even after a 2.34% bounce over the last month. With a beta of 1.793, macro volatility hits harder here than elsewhere.
The bear case is real: Energy storage revenue fell 12% YoY in Q1, operating expenses surged 37% on AI R&D, and global vehicle inventory rose to 27 days from 22. Battery pack capacity remains the binding constraint on production. Tariff uncertainty and lower regulatory credit revenue add pressure, and prediction markets put just a 10% probability on a California robotaxi launch by June 30. The market wants proof, not promises.
Wall Street Sees Almost No Upside. Our Model Sees More
The Street’s consensus target is $411.89, essentially flat. Ratings split: 5 Strong Buy, 18 Buy, 17 Hold, 4 Sell, 3 Strong Sell, with 49% bullish sentiment. Our base case lands at $510.02 by 2030 (24.4% total return), with a bull scenario of $644.91 and a bear case of $377.48. Model confidence is 90%.
Analysts appear anchored to the present, pricing Tesla as an automaker in a soft cycle. The gap sits in what the Street is leaving out: FSD subscription compounding, Cybercab volume, Optimus, and the AI5 inference chip.
The Path to $650 Per Share
Reaching $650 from today’s price of $409.99 would require a 58.5% gain. With forward EPS of $1.90, a price of $650 implies a forward P/E of 342x. Our base case of $510.02 already implies 227x, meaning the bold target needs roughly 116x additional multiple expansion or a sharp lift in forward EPS as AI businesses scale.
That’s a stretch on multiple, but defensible if forward EPS re-rates higher. Catalysts are in motion: Cybercab, Tesla Semi, and Megapack 3 all enter volume production in 2026; FSD v14.3 launched in April with up to 20% lower inference latency; and unsupervised Robotaxi rides launched in Dallas and Houston.
Management said “hardware-related profits are expected to be accompanied by an acceleration of AI, software, and fleet-based profits.” If FSD attach rates and Optimus revenue compound, EPS drives the multiple. Biggest risk: battery capacity caps deliveries and AI monetization slips into 2028.
Where Tesla Trades Today vs Its Earnings Power
At $409.99 on forward EPS of $1.90, Tesla trades at 216x forward earnings. That’s rich on any traditional auto framework and only makes sense if you underwrite the AI and autonomy thesis. Shares sit roughly 17% off the 52-week high of $498.83 and well above the $273.21 low. Over 10 years, the stock has returned 2,691.83%. That history is why $650 is even on the table.
Is $650 Realistic? My Verdict
Hitting $650 by 2030 requires a 58.5% gain and sits above our bull case of $644.91. It’s a stretch, but not a long shot.
Three things must go right: FSD subscription revenue must scale toward true software margins, Cybercab and Optimus must move from pilot to volume on schedule, and automotive margins must hold above 20% as ASPs normalize. Failure to monetize autonomy on schedule would derail it. We’ve outlined the blueprint for how Tesla could reach $650 in 2030.