Why you can't buy a Tesla in these states

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It’s amazing that Tesla (TSLA) even exists. Before Tesla, the most recent successful American auto startup was Chrysler, over 90 years ago.

Tesla has survived the first hard part: designing beautiful, fast, high-tech electric cars that a lot of people want and love.

Now come all the other hard parts: pacifying investors, navigating legal problems, getting the cars delivered—and getting permission to sell them.

That’s right. In some states, Tesla is not allowed to open dealerships.

I live in one of them: Connecticut. Two years ago, I added myself to the waiting list for the Tesla Model 3. This summer, I finally picked it up—in New York. As I drove it back home over the state border, I wondered why Connecticut would want to hand over all the sales tax I just paid to a rival state.

Finding the answer turned out to be a long and winding road.

If you live in one of the blue states, you don’t have to cross state lines to buy a Tesla. Graphic credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance
If you live in one of the blue states, you don’t have to cross state lines to buy a Tesla. Graphic credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance

Where Tesla is banned

It’s hard to pin down exactly how many states truly don’t want Tesla to open dealerships. Sixteen states have laws on the books that would prevent that, but Tesla hasn’t challenged those laws yet in some of them. More on that in a moment.

Here are those states: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Texas.

Then there are nine states that limit the number of dealerships Tesla can open: Colorado (limit: one), North Carolina (one), Virginia (two), Georgia (five), Maryland (four), New Jersey (four), New York (five), Ohio (three), Pennsylvania (five). (These totals don’t count the “galleries” that Tesla has opened in some states, where you can see the cars and ask questions—but you can’t even discuss buying one.)

In a capitalist system, it might seem counterintuitive for a state to prevent a popular company from opening a store. Aren’t new businesses good? Don’t they generate property taxes and sales tax? Don’t they mean more local jobs?

Wouldn’t welcoming a big player in electric cars help these states with their environmental goals? (Connecticut’s government, for example, aims to lower emissions to 45% of 2001 levels by 2030.)

Don’t we want to support American manufacturing?

It’s not always easy to buy a Tesla. Illustration credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance
It’s not always easy to buy a Tesla. Illustration credit: David Foster/Yahoo Finance

Answer #1: Franchise laws

The first reason for the state bans: Tesla insists on operating its own dealerships, rather than offering franchises (local dealerships, which buy the cars from the manufacturer) like those of GM, Ford, Toyota, Honda, and others.

“Existing franchise dealers have a fundamental conflict of interest between selling gasoline cars, which constitute the vast majority of their business, and selling the new technology of electric cars,” CEO Elon Musk writes on Tesla’s site. “It is impossible for them to explain the advantages of going electric without simultaneously undermining their traditional business.”