My next vehicle will likely be a Tesla of some sort.
Just a little friendly advice...
When you first get a Tesla, you feel like part of a special club. The quietness, smoothness, and instant torque are impressive. Once the honeymoon is over and you're no longer overwhelmed and distracted by the exclusivity and driving experience, it becomes "just another car" and you start to notice all the problems - rattles, poor fit and finish, software glitches, etc. Because you paid a lot of money for it and still want to be part of "the club", you tend to hide your frustrations from others to avoid embarrassment and bury your head in the sand.
You don't buy a Tesla to save money or the environment - you buy one to be on the cutting edge of personal transportation. Tesla offers powerful electric motors, high-capacity batteries, lots of "gee-whiz" features, perhaps the highest level of autonomy currently available, and clean, simple styling, but they don't build a very
reliable automobile. Studies reveal they have over twice as many problems as the industry average - even worse than any FCA brand (Fiat, Chrysler, Dodge, Ram, Jeep).