Tesla’s Chinese manufacturing hub just hit a number that tells you everything about where the company’s centre of gravity sits.
The Shanghai Gigafactory produced its four-millionth vehicle today — a six-seat Model Y Long Range (long wheelbase version) finished in Starlight Gold.
Tesla marked the occasion with a post on Weibo, celebrating what’s become its most productive facility anywhere in the world.
The pace is striking. When production kicked off in late 2019, it took the plant over two and a half years to build its first million cars. The jump from three million to four million? Fourteen months. That’s the kind of acceleration you get when a factory hits its stride.
Shanghai now supplies close to half of Tesla’s worldwide deliveries, churning out Model 3 sedans and Model Y crossovers for Chinese buyers and export customers across Asia and Europe. The operation runs tight — current output sits at roughly one completed vehicle every 30s.
Part of what makes the Shanghai plant so efficient is its supply chain. More than 95% of components now come from Chinese suppliers, slashing logistics costs and speeding up production cycles. It’s one reason Tesla can move so quickly while others struggle to scale.
The milestone comes at an interesting moment. China’s EV market has never been more competitive, with domestic brands like BYD and emerging players eating into market share.
Tesla’s Shanghai factory isn’t just a manufacturing success story — it’s the linchpin of the company’s ability to compete in the world’s largest and most demanding electric vehicle market.
Four million cars in just six years. The question now is how fast Tesla can get to five million, and whether the factory’s breakneck pace can be sustained as competition intensifies.
















