The R2 is nearly here — can Rivian stick the landing? | The Verge
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The R2 is nearly here — can Rivian stick the landing?
The R2 arrives in a segment already dominated by the Model Y. But ultimately Rivian needs to do more than just beat Tesla if it’s going to survive.
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The R2 is nearly here — can Rivian stick the landing?
The R2 arrives in a segment already dominated by the Model Y. But ultimately Rivian needs to do more than just beat Tesla if it’s going to survive.
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On Thursday, Rivian revealed its most important vehicle to date: the R2, a midsize SUV that eventually will start at under $50,000. As a distinctive EV with an attractive sticker price, the R2 is designed to take Rivian to the next level. In fact, the company is banking on it. If they succeed, then Rivian would be well positioned to usurp Tesla’s status as the most important EV company in America. If it doesn’t, the company may simply cease to exist.
I’m not trying to be overly dramatic. The R2 is increasingly looking like the lone survivor in an apocalyptic wasteland, traveling down a path lined with the corpses of EV programs that had their plugs pulled by cash-strapped automakers. Whether it can pull through this harsh environment remains entirely up to Rivian and its marketing department.
“Rivian’s R2 announcement feels less like a victory lap and more like a statement of intent at a critical moment for the company,” said Paul Waatti, director of industry analysis at Auto Pacific. “This is the most difficult EV market automakers have faced, with the federal incentive gone, tariff pressure still disrupting the business case, and consumers becoming much more price-sensitive.”
Waati notes that the same day Rivian rolled out its R2 pricing and lineup plans, Honda said it was scrapping three late-stage EV programs for the US market — the Zero Series Saloon and SUV, and Acura RSX — and declared it will write down many billions of dollars to do so.
“That is a stark reminder that even established OEM programs near the finish line are vulnerable in this environment,” Waatti said.
Rivian has outlined an ambitious launch plan for the R2. The company told investors last month that it expects to sell 20,000-25,000 this year, with the first vehicles — the
Rivian hasn’t shared an update on the R2’s reservation numbers since July 2024, when Rivian VP of Manufacturing Tim Fallon said they had “well over 100,000.” Since then, nothing. There’s probably some expectation setting going on here. If they reveal a big number, the question immediately becomes about whether the company can match the demand. There’s also production to consider. Tesla’s Model 3 “production hell” looms large over any EV launch, and any delay in delivery can frustrate customers.
Still, the R2 seems to check all the right boxes. And the early reviews of the pre-production vehicles have been largely positive, with some saying its Rivian’s answer to the Model Y. Rivian has a built-in fan base of people who really want the company to succeed. Sure, they’re not as loud or manic as Tesla fans. But they love the design, the attention to detail, the Easter eggs, and especially the technology.
But the R2 is not about the fans; it’s about whether Rivian can win over customers who have been skeptical about EVs, the ones who have been priced out of the market or read the headlines about slowing sales or disappearing incentives and figure why bother. If Rivian can convert new customers or pull in some of those Jeep and Bronco owners, it may have a real winner on its hands.
“The jury is still out on whether Rivian truly stuck the landing,” said Jessica Caldwell, director of insights at Edmunds, “but the R2 clearly moves the company a step closer to the mass market, which is exactly where it needs to go. A launch model starting at
“The jury is still out on whether Rivian truly stuck the landing.”
Will it beat the Model Y? The R2 certainly succeeds in looking like a real car, and not a weird blob on wheels like Tesla’s most popular vehicles. The R2 is nearly 3 inches shorter than the Model Y but features a longer wheelbase (115.6 in vs. 113.8 in). It also has over 50 percent more ground clearance than the Model Y (9.6 in vs. 6.4 in). Most R2 owners probably won’t be doing too much off-roading, but people love to have the option.
The R2 also migrates over some other design features from the off-roading world that people will probably dig. It features a unique power-down rear window and “venting” rear quarter windows, a feature typically found in the Toyota 4 Runner. This will be a great feature for people with long sports gear, like surfboards or skis, as well as for pet owners. Both the R2 and Model Y take the minimalist approach to cabin controls, but Rivian added a pair of big, chunky scroll wheels to the steering wheel for some added tactility. The R2 also has a gauge cluster, and the Model Y does not. Range figures are fairly comparable, but Tesla is offering more miles in its base Model Y (321) versus the R2’s base (275).
But those are just the specs. Caldwell notes that Tesla has a myriad of other advantages over Rivian, including price, scale, and efficiency. Rivian, for all its well-wishers and good vibes (no one is trying to boycott the brand, for example), is still just a niche player. The R1T and R1S are iconic, but also expensive, and their sales have been a drop in the bucket compared to the Model Y. Rivian will need to lean into its strengths, while also staking out a new position for itself as a mass-market aspirant.
“The R2 arrives with a fresher brand image in a segment where Tesla already dominates, and Rivian is clearly trying to position the vehicle as a new outdoor-ready alternative to the typical commuter crossover that feels somewhat stale,” Caldwell said. “Ultimately, the R2 isn’t just trying to beat the Model Y on specs or price. It’s giving buyers a distinctly different take on the electric SUV.”
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