Elon Musk is once again promising the long-delayed next-generation Tesla Roadster is just around the corner. This time, he says an “unveil” is coming next month — April 2026.
The Tesla CEO made the claim on X today while quote-tweeting a post about the anniversary of the original Roadster’s production start in 2008. He wrote: “New Roadster unveil hopefully next month. It will be a banger next-level.”
A decade of broken Roadster promises
If this sounds familiar, it should. Tesla first unveiled the next-generation Roadster prototype in November 2017 with a promised production start of 2020. That didn’t happen. Then it was 2022. Then 2023. Then 2024. Then 2025.
Each year, Musk has moved the goalpost, claiming delivery was just a year or two away. The pattern has become so predictable that it’s essentially a meme in the EV community.
The Roadster saga has frustrated reservation holders who put down significant deposits years ago. Sam Altman publicly called out Tesla after trying to cancel his $50,000 reservation, placed in 2018, only to find the reservation email address had been shut down. He’s not alone. Multiple reservation holders have reported similar difficulties getting their money back after 7+ years of waiting.
Founders’ Series buyers, who gave Tesla $250,000 deposits, have been waiting even longer.
The April date raises eyebrows
Musk’s “next month” timeline aligns with a date he previously floated at Tesla’s shareholder meeting in late 2025. At that meeting, he pushed the Roadster demo to April 1, 2026, April Fools’ Day, and openly admitted the date gives him “deniability because I can say I was just kidding.”
That’s the CEO of a public company joking about the credibility of his own product timelines. Production, at that point, was pushed to 2027 or 2028, a full 7 to 8 years behind the original promise.
There’s also a notable shift in language. Previously, Musk described the April event as a “demo.” Now he’s calling it an “unveil,” suggesting the design may have changed significantly from the 2017 prototype. He said as much last year, telling shareholders the new Roadster will be “very different than what we’ve shown previously.”
That tracks with Tesla’s recent trademark filings from February, which included a new vehicle silhouette that appeared sleeker and squarer at the roofline compared to the 2017 concept.

The word “hopefully” is doing heavy lifting
The most telling part of today’s tweet is the word “hopefully.” Even Musk appears to lack full confidence in his own timeline. That qualifier stands out from a CEO who typically speaks in absolutes about Tesla’s future — promising autonomous robotaxis “next year” (every year) and a million-robot Optimus army by 2029.
When the person making the promise hedges this openly, it’s worth paying attention.
Meanwhile, Tesla also has job listings for Roadster manufacturing engineers that describe “concept development and launch of battery manufacturing equipment” — language suggesting early-stage work, not imminent production.
Author: Fred Lambert
Source: Electrek
Reviewed By: Editorial Team