The Porsche Taycan is, inarguably, a modern automotive wonder. It’s physical proof that Porsche’s philosophies can be distilled just as well into an electric car as it can into one powered by gasoline; it’s a four-door sedan with the looks and performance of a high-performance coupe.
It is, however, also a Porsche — which means it ain’t cheap. The Taycan was introduced in Turbo and Turbo S forms, which boast base prices of $152,250 and $186,350 respectively before the $7,500 federal tax credit is factored in. The longer-range, slightly-slower Taycan 4S model that followed seemed like a bargain by comparison, ringing up the register at a starting price of $105,150 — although anyone who wants maximum range and performance will need to add $5,570 to that for the larger battery.
For calendar year 2021, however, there’s finally a way for those of us who don’t want to drop six figures on a car to park a Taycan in our garages: the base Taycan, announced for the U.S. on January 19th at a base price of $81,250.
Again, that’s before the federal tax credit is lopped off the net cost, as well as before any of the myriad state tax breaks and other incentives are added in. If you live in Colorado, for example, you can knock off another $2,500; if you’re in California, you can subtract an extra $4,500 from the cost. That means a Los Angelino can snag a base Taycan for less than $70,000 — 30 grand less than a comparable base 911.
If you paid attention to the entire headline above, however, you might be wondering, but there’s a catch, right? Sadly, yes. The affordable Taycan we’re discussing here is the least-powerful version — and it only comes in rear-wheel-drive.
