To reach this price point, Slate removed items many drivers now consider standard, including touchscreens, stereo systems, and advanced driver-assistance tech. Instead, the cabin features a manual phone mount and hand-crank windows. While competitors like the Ford Maverick start around $30,000, Slate is positioning itself as a rare, budget-friendly alternative that favors utility over the "trimflation" currently gripping the automotive sector.
Despite its bare-bones aesthetic, the truck is engineered for a five-star safety rating and includes a 10-year, 110,000-mile powertrain warranty. Driving it reveals a vehicle that feels intentionally minimal rather than cheap, with performance that mimics a compact crossover. The truck manages a 1,550-pound payload and 2,000-pound towing capacity, powered by a 205-mile range battery. Slate plans to bolster this base model with over 200 accessories, allowing owners to customize their vehicles via a direct-to-consumer model that bypasses dealer markups.




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