Tesla has quietly broadened the Model 3 family in the US with a new Standard edition that pares back kit to push the list price lower. Priced from €34,380, the Model 3 Standard undercuts the Premium trim by about €5,115, giving buyers a more affordable entry into Tesla ownership without changing the car’s core identity. The new Standard brings the US Model 3 line-up to four variants, matching the size of the range sold in the EU.
Tesla hasn’t confirmed whether this trimmed model will be offered in other markets, but where a Rear-Wheel Drive version already serves as the entry point, it’s more likely Tesla will refresh or replace that offering rather than add a separate Standard badge. Range and performance are the headline strengths. Tesla quotes an EPA single-charge range of 321 miles — roughly 517 km — putting the Standard almost level with the cheapest Model 3 available in the European market. Tesla won’t disclose battery capacity, though the suspicion is that the Standard inherits the same “upgraded battery pack” introduced recently on the Rear-Wheel Drive model. Driving dynamics mirror that Rear-Wheel Drive setup.
The Standard nails 0–97 km/h in 5.8 seconds and tops out at about 201 km/h, which points to the same rear-mounted electric motor rated at 245 hp. In other words, the newcomer is designed to deliver the familiar Teslar blend of brisk acceleration and motorway cruising without premium add-ons driving up the price. The savings come from simplifying the specification rather than cutting mechanical capability. Inside, the Standard swaps the faux-leather trim found on higher models for part-cloth seats and adopts a slimmer centre console that creates an open storage area.
This version also ditches the physical key fob in favour of smartphone access and rolls on a new set of 18-inch aero-optimised wheels aimed at improving real-world efficiency. Tesla has removed a few comfort and convenience items to achieve the lower price. The subwoofer is gone, although the seven-speaker sound system remains; there’s no FM/AM radio tuner, no rear touchscreen, and ambient interior lighting has been omitted. Steering wheel and door mirror adjustment are manual rather than electric. In terms of advanced technology, the Standard model does not include Tesla’s Autosteer driver-assistance feature nor the adaptive active dampers available on higher-spec cars.
For buyers focused on value, the Standard hits a clear sweet spot: familiar Tesla performance and long range with fewer bells and whistles.It’s a pragmatic package for people who will prioritise daily usability, running cost and range over luxury trimmings or the latest infotainment bells. If you’re shopping in the used market, there are older Model 3s available at much lower prices; examples have been seen for under €15,210. For prospective new-car buyers, the Standard’s positioning at roughly €34,380 gives a straightforward, lower-cost route into the Model 3 experience while keeping the driving fundamentals intact. Overall, the Model 3 Standard is a sensible move: it broadens customer choice, brings Tesla ownership within reach of more buyers, and keeps the brand’s core proposition — an efficient, quick electric saloon with real-world range — firmly in place.