Image: RivianDead batteries and six-month delivery waits have defined EV shopping, but Rivian’s R2 promises to flip that script. Starting June 9, the company will simultaneously begin order invites, first deliveries, and demo drives for its smaller, more affordable SUV.If you’re tired of Tesla’s production lottery, this 2-to-6-week order-to-delivery promise sounds almost too good to be true. The convergence of configuration, delivery, and test drives on a single date signals Rivian’s confidence in their production ramp.Launch Edition Sets Premium Entry PointInitial R2 buyers pay $57,990 for performance package with lifetime driver assistance.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe R2 Performance Launch Package arrives first at $57,990, bundling Rivian’s Autonomy+ hands-free driving system for life. That’s significant value—after launch, Autonomy+ costs $49.99 monthly or $2,500 upfront.You also get a 4,400-pound tow rating and that distinctive Rivian Green key fob that screams “I’m not driving a Tesla.” Production began April 22 at Rivian’s Normal, Illinois plant, the same facility cranking out R1T trucks.But the real story unfolds over the next three years.Price Ladder Targets Mass MarketRivian plans $45,000 base model by late 2027, directly challenging Tesla’s pricing.This isn’t just another premium EV masquerading as affordable. Rivian has mapped out a deliberate price descent:AdvertisementAdvertisementPremium trim at $53,990 in late 2026Standard Long Range at $48,490 by mid-2027Base model “around $45,000” by late 2027That bottom rung puts R2 squarely against Tesla’s Model Y and Ford’s Mustang Mach-E in the suburban driveway wars. CEO RJ Scaringe calls R2 “maybe the most important thing we’ve launched to date,” and the math backs up his urgency.Rivian targets 20,000-25,000 R2 deliveries in 2026, scaling toward the plant’s 155,000 annual R2 capacity. After operating losses since 2009, this is Rivian’s Model Y moment—the make-or-break product that either delivers profitability or confirms the company can’t escape its premium niche.Service Network Expansion Supports Volume PushRivian hits 100 service centers while expanding mobile support by 50% this year.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe company isn’t just ramping production; it’s building the infrastructure mainstream buyers expect. Rivian reached 100 service centers in Q1 and aims for over 150 by 2027, plus a 50% mobile service fleet expansion.That matters because your suburban neighbors won’t tolerate the early-adopter headaches that R1T enthusiasts embraced. Demo drives starting June 9 at Rivian Spaces let skeptics test the goods before committing.Whether Rivian can sustain those ambitious delivery timelines while maintaining quality remains the $45,000 question. Success makes them Tesla’s first legitimate mainstream challenger. Failure keeps them forever chasing Elon’s taillights.From the coolest cars to the must-have gadgets, GadgetReview’s daily newsletter keeps you in the know. Subscribe - it’s fun, fast, and free.