Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.American EV buyers looking for a true bargain are celebrating Slate Auto's ultra-affordable lineup. Backed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the startup shook the automotive industry by launching its minimalist electric pickup with a starting price of just $24,950. However, across the northern border, the sentiment is vastly different. Slate has officially confirmed that its highly anticipated, low-cost electric truck will not be sold in Canada.Slate AutoWhat Slate SaidSpeaking to Automotive News Canada, Slate spokesperson Jeff Jablansky explicitly stated that the company's current strategy stops at the U.S. border. While Slate did not dive into the exact economics behind the decision, the reality of cross-border trade likely killed the math. Since the startup plans to manufacture its vehicles in Indiana, exporting them to Canada would trigger retaliatory 25 percent tariffs on American-built vehicles. When factoring in import duties, logistics, and exchange rates, the truck's headline-grabbing, sub-$25k price tag would completely vanish, pushing it into standard, uncompetitive EV price territory.AdvertisementAdvertisementFor American readers, this geographic exclusivity is a massive win. Slate's radically simple formula—which ditches powered seats, giant infotainment touchscreens, and even power windows in favor of hand-crank windows—aims to deliver a pure utility vehicle. Despite the bare-bones interior, it promises a highly practical 205 miles (330 km) of electric range and room for two.SlateA Calculated Tradeoff?The strategy is paying off domestically. Slate has already amassed roughly 180,000 reservations from U.S. buyers eager for an affordable workhorse. Production is on track, with initial deliveries scheduled to begin in late 2026. While Canadian buyers will have to wait for Ford's promised sub-$30,000 compact electric truck arriving in 2027, American consumers hold the exclusive keys to the cheapest new electric pickup on the market.This story was originally published by Autoblog on Jul 5, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.