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There’s still time to get a free EV charger with the purchase or lease of a new Hyundai electric vehicle. The deal is good on the 2023 or 2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5 and IONIQ 6 or a 2023 Kona electric.

Hyundai introduced the promo in September. The offer includes a free ChargePoint L2 Home Flex EV charger (see our review), valued at $549 MSRP, and a $600 installation credit through Hyundai Home.

For those familiar with GM’s $1,000 deal with Qmerit on the Chevy Bolt, Hyundai’s offer is similar but offers even more credit.

The free EV charger promo was expected to run until the end of October, but Hyundai is extending it after a positive response.

According to Hyundai’s website, the deal is now good until January 2, 2024. The offer is available on a new 2023-2024 IONIQ 5 and IONIQ 6 lease or purchase. The 2023 Kona Electric is also eligible, but the new 2024 model is not included.

Once you purchase or lease an EV through Hyundai Motor Finance, you will receive an email with a coupon code for the free EV charger in around 7-10 days.

Hyundai-free-EV-charger
Hyundai IONIQ 5 (left) and IONIQ 6 (right) at a Tesla Supercharger (Source: Hyundai)

Hyundai offers a free EV charger with a lease or purchase

To take advantage of the offer, go to Hyundai Home Marketplace, enter the code, and you can schedule installation.

Hardwired installations must be through Hyundai Home to receive the charger. Installations need to be scheduled within 90 days and completed within 180 days.

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Hyundai IONIQ 5 (Source: Hyundai)

After registering, Hyundai will connect you with an energy adviser to guide you through the process. The advisers can help with anything electric-related along the way, including finding trusted installers or pulling permits.

The company launched Hyundai Home in partnership with Electrum last year to provide a “one-stop online marketplace” for finding solar panels, energy storage, EV chargers, and local installers.

Hyundai slashed EV lease prices on the IONIQ 5 and IONIQ 6 last month, with some of the lowest rates offered since launching. With 80-90% of EV owners charging at home, a free L2 charger can be a big draw for buyers.

The automaker’s EV sales in the US have been heating up, with the IONIQ 5 setting a new October sales record last month.

Are you ready to get behind the wheel of a brand-new Hyundai EV at some of the lowest prices yet? You can use our links below to find great deals on Hyundai’s electric cars near you.

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Polestar 2 lease price drops to $299 a month thanks to new $10k discount

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Polestar 2 lease price drops to 9 a month thanks to new k discount

Thanks to the $10,000 Polestar Clean Vehicle Incentive introduced last week, 2024 Polestar 2 lease prices are now over $120 a month cheaper.

CarsDirect reports that through May 31, the 2024 Polestar 2 Long Range Dual Motor can be leased for $299 for 27 months with $3,299 due at signing. 

The auto research portal says that’s a $50 drop in the monthly payment with $2,050 less required at signing. As a result, the effective cost fell $126, from $547 per month to $421 before taxes & fees.

The Polestar 2 Dual Motor – list price $55,300 – is a much better deal to lease than the Single Motor model – list price $49,900 – because amazingly, they have the same lease price. That’s basically a free upgrade to the Dual Motor model.

The Polestar 2 first made its debut in 2019 as the automaker’s first fully electric car. It launched in mid-2020 and the milestone 150,000th car rolled off the assembly line in August 2023.

The Polestar 2 is expected to be phased out in 2027, and company says the Polestar 7 will succeed it.

Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Polestar 2 in stock. –affiliate*

Read more: 2024 Polestar 2 first drive: Dual motor shines on the road, but the single motor’s range is a big win


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Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisers to help you every step of the way. Get started here. –ad*

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When will Tesla cars be capable of unsupervised full self-driving (SAE Level 5)?

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Elon Musk outlines upcoming Tesla Full Self-Driving updates

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Elon Musk outlines upcoming Tesla Full Self-Driving updates

Elon Musk has given an update with an outline for Tesla’s upcoming Full Self-Driving (FSD) software updates.

With FSD v12 and the upcoming launch of Tesla’s dedicated Robotaxi, there’s a lot of excitement around Tesla’s self-driving effort.

Musk is again in the too-familiar position of predicting that the automaker is close to releasing a true self-driving system, but the path to get there is still far from clear.

Now the CEO is providing some new comments on the upcoming release schedule for FSD:

“12.4 has almost completely retrained models. The final touches are for comfort, as it sometimes accelerates or brakes too fast for most people’s taste.”

Tesla FSD drivers are currently on 12.3.6 and the .4 update is expected to be a bigger step change, which Musk appears to confirm by saying that Tesla “completely retrained” the models.

The CEO recently said that Tesla is no longer constrained by training compute power after bringing more capacity online, giving the FSD team more opportunities to retrain neural nets with increasingly cleaner data.

Musk then continued about Tesla’s upcoming updates:

12.5 and 12.6 are in various stages of testing. We’re getting into rare, complex situations, for example: going down a narrow, one-way road, encountering a road closure and having to reverse out to find a new route. That closure also needs to be communicated to the rest of the fleet, so you don’t get a whole bunch of Teslas stuck down a road.

There’s no timeline for these upcoming updates beyond the fact that they are currently in internal testing, but Musk did say that v12.4 could come to the Tesla fleet as soon next week.

Electrek’s Take

Again, I’ve been impressed with v12.3.3-4. I’ve just got v12.3.6, but I haven’t had time to test it yet. I plan to do that this weekend. Also, I’ve been saying that if I start seeing decent improvements with the upcoming updates, I think I’ll start to see a clearer path to Tesla finally delivering on its promise – or at least a level 4 self-driving system.

However, as usual, when talking about FSD and especially when praising the system, I think it’s important to remind everyone that the keyword in ‘Supervised Full Self-Driving’ is ‘Supervised.’ Drivers need to remain attentive at all times and ready to take control.

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