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Porsche’s Macan Turbo Electric Lost Over $33,000 In Value After Just 1,500 Miles

  • Nearly-new Macan Turbo Electric struggled to excite auction bidders.
  • High-specification, 1,500-mile car failed to sell on the Cars&Bids site.
  • Porsche is also struggling with a fall in demand for new examples.

Hype and market reality are very different. Just check out the tale of this Porsche Macan Electric. A 2025 MY car in desirable Turbo trim bought for over $120,0000 when the Macan EV was still bathing in the glow of the model’s launch buzz, it stalled at just $88,500 in bids on an auction website this month.

This particular example, finished in Ice Grey Metallic and with just 1,500 miles (2,414 km) on the clock, originally stickered at $121,855 including destination when sold through Porsche Edison, NJ. That’s some serious money for a compact luxury SUV, even one wearing a Porsche badge.

More: Porsche’s Next Gas Macan Is Already Testing In An Audi Disguise

But then it also offers some serious go. The Macan Turbo Electric packs dual-motors pushing around 630 hp (639 PS / 470 kW) and a massive 833 lb ft (1,130 Nm) of torque through all four wheels. It’ll hit 60 mph (96 km/h) in just 3.1 seconds and still promises nearly 300 miles (483 km) of EPA range.

RS Wheels And Bottom Coolers

A bare-bones Turbo would have cost $105,300, but this car’s first owner splashed out another $15k on goodies like the 22-inch RS Spyder Design wheels ($3,900), head-up display ($2,630), Sport Chrono package ($980), and $600 of fake engine sounds. It also has a $1,310 Premium Package that included four-zone climate, ventilated front seats and heated rear seats.

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It’s the kind of EV most of us would love to see on our driveways, but Cars&Bids visitors didn’t like it enough to put in on theirs. The C&B listing shows bidding stopped short of the unknown reserve at $88,500, which would have represented a $33,355 haircut, and that was obviously too much for the seller to handle. The seller, by the way, claims he bought the car 100 miles (160 km) ago, so we don’t know how much he would have lost had the final bid secured a sale.

New Macan Sales Struggling

Macan Electric owners looking to exit aren’t the only one struggling to find buyers for the EV. So are Porsche dealers. Global Macan sales are already sliding, down 23 percent overall, and the electric version is taking an even harder hit. Deliveries dropped 43 percent year over year in Q1, while the combustion version most buyers prefer goes out of production this summer and won’t be replaced until 2028.

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Cars&Bids

The Cybertruck Nobody Wanted New Is Now The One Nobody Wants Used

  • The Cybertruck Long Range RWD was only built for a limited time last year.
  • This pickup has a single electric motor and a 123 kWh battery pack.
  • Tesla lowered the Cybertruck’s towing capacity from 11,000 lbs to 7,500 lbs.

The Tesla Cybertruck’s Long Range RWD variant was short-lived, produced for less than six months, yet that rarity has done little to shield it from steep depreciation. Just look at this 2025 example, which recently changed hands for just $56,500.

Tesla introduced the Cybertruck Long Range RWD last year, pricing it from $69,990 and undercutting the All-Wheel Drive model by $10,000. However, it never proved particularly popular as Tesla cut out some important features to achieve the somewhat more approachable price tag.

 The Cybertruck Nobody Wanted New Is Now The One Nobody Wants Used

To get there, Tesla stripped back more than just an electric motor. The front axle is left unpowered, and buyers also miss out on a powered tonneau cover, 120/240V outlets, and the premium 15-speaker sound system, replaced here by a basic seven-speaker setup. The interior takes another step down with textile seats instead of leather and no rear touchscreen.

Capability takes a hit too. Towing drops from 11,000 lbs (4,989 kg) to 7,500 lbs (3,401 kg), while payload falls from 2,500 lbs (1,133 kg) to 2,006 lbs (910 kg). It’s a long list, and not the kind that quietly disappears once you’ve signed the paperwork.

Read: New Video Shows Tesla Nearly Going Off Overpass With Mom And Baby Inside

With this in mind, it’s perhaps no surprise that demand for used examples isn’t particularly strong. This Cybertruck was sold on Cars & Bids earlier this week, falling well short of its original price tag of $73,490, which included optional $3,500 20-inch Cyber wheels with 35-inch tires.

The Least Desirable Cybertruck?

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Cars & Bids

The fact that the owner also spent several thousand dollars to wrap the truck in Halo Green, add aftermarket side steps, and fit leather seat covers doesn’t seem to have boosted interest. It has just 5,800 miles (9,334 km) on the clock, which should have helped its value, but clearly hasn’t made much difference.

There is, at least, one clear strength. The RWD Long Range model carries a sizeable 123 kWh battery pack, giving it the best range of any Cybertruck at an EPA-rated 350 miles (563 km). That should be a headline advantage. Still, pairing that range with a rear-wheel-drive setup in a pickup limits how useful it feels in the real world, especially for buyers who expect capability to match the look.

In the end, this version lands in an awkward middle ground. It is cheaper, yet not cheap enough. It goes farther, yet gives up too much along the way. And in a segment where image and ability matter just as much as numbers, that balance does not seem to be working.

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Cars & Bids

This 1,111-HP Lucid Air Lost More Than A Third Of A Typical Pennsylvania Home’s Price

  • The Air Dream Edition Performance carried a hefty $170,500 MSRP.
  • After 22,000 miles, the depreciation works out to nearly $5 per mile.
  • Despite that, the luxury EV still sprints to 60 mph in just 2.5 seconds.

Luxury EVs have developed a nasty reputation for losing value at a frightening rate over the past few years, especially in the upper end of the market. However, you may be surprised to learn just how much this Lucid Air has depreciated since it was delivered in March of 2022.

The Air you’re looking at is the Dream Edition Performance, which was introduced as the flagship iteration of the all-electric sedan. With the exception of the almighty Sapphire, it’s the highest-powered version of the Air that’s been sold, thumping out a ridiculous 1,111 hp and 1,025 lb-ft of torque.

Read: Lucid Owner Gets A $50,000 Lesson On Depreciation

A look at the window sticker reveals the original owner paid $170,500 for the car. Given the performance it offers, the sleek exterior styling, and the upmarket interior, that’s not an unreasonable amount of money. But, after being driven 22,000 miles (35,000 km) over the past four years, the car’s value has plummeted, recently selling for $67,067 in Cars & Bids.

A Six Figure EV Bargain

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Cars & Bids

The result is a staggering $103,433 wiped off the price. Spread across the 22,000 miles it covered, that works out to just under $5 lost for every mile driven.

For a sense of scale, that drop would cover a substantial chunk of a home in some US states. Bankrate data puts the median house price at about $282,400 in Alabama, $255,300 in Arkansas, $285,600 in Illinois, $230,600 in Iowa, $301,000 in Pennsylvania, and $249,300 in Michigan, to name a few. In other words, the money lost on this one car equals well over a third of a typical home in those places.

While it’s hard not to feel bad for the original owner, it’s nice to see a car as good as the Air becoming more accessible. The listing reveals the performance sedan has been fastidiously maintained over the past four years, and has had several parts replaced and numerous recall campaigns completed.

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Cars & Bids

Off the line, the Air Dream Edition Performance can hit 60 mph (96 km/h) in just 2.5 seconds and storm down the quarter-mile in 9.9 seconds. Thanks to the sizeable 118 kWh battery pack, it can also travel up to 451 miles on a charge when equipped with the 21-inch wheels like this one.

Then there’s the cabin. While the Air may often be compared to the Tesla Model S, its interior is more luxurious and better equipped. Key features include Nappa full-grain leather upholstery, heated and ventilated front massage seats, a 34-inch infotainment and gauge cluster display, and a 21-speaker sound system. This Air also includes the Santa Monica interior trim, combining dark blue and light cream-colored leather.

Bad news for the first owner, great news for the next one. So the question is, would you buy a used Lucid Air knowing just how quickly these things depreciate?

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Cars & Bids

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