The 2026 Tesla Model X is a full-size luxury electric SUV featuring falcon-wing rear doors and three-row seating for up to seven passengers. It provides seating and cargo space suitable for families along with quick acceleration from its electric powertrain. Comparable vehicles include the Rivian R1S with off-road capability and battery options, the Kia EV9 offering three-row seating at a lower price point, and the BMW iX with conventional luxury elements. The 2026 model receives updates to the existing platform, including suspension adjustments for better ride comfort, increased sound insulation for a quieter interior, and a small range improvement to 352 miles for the all-wheel-drive version. The base powertrain consists of dual electric motors—one at the front axle and one at the rear—for all-wheel drive, with output of 670 horsepower and a 0-60 mph time under four seconds powered by a large battery pack.
The Model X uses a 17-inch central touchscreen for its infotainment system, which manages navigation with real-time traffic, media services such as Netflix and Spotify, climate settings, and games when stationary. It supports phone-as-key functionality and voice controls, now including the "Hey Grok" activation phrase. Updates for 2026 feature an improved Full Self-Driving supervised system with a dedicated app for activation and oversight, better on-screen visualizations, and hardware including enhanced cameras for autonomy in diverse scenarios. Interior enhancements comprise ambient lighting and active noise cancellation. The companion mobile app enables remote preconditioning, charging management, live camera feeds, and summon capability, while over-the-air updates add functions like energy monitoring and pet mode, with subscriptions for advanced driver assistance.
What You're Really Signing Up For
- Yoke turn signals and swipe-to-shift prone to frustrating usability errors.
- Autopilot and Auto Park Assist trigger confusing alerts and failures.
- Privacy risks from cabin camera sharing and vague law enforcement data access.
- Opting out of data collection disables key features and updates.
- Full functionality often requires ongoing data sharing and subscriptions.
Top Reported Issues
The most frequently mentioned problems by owners
Yoke turn signals hard to use
The Model X uses a yoke-style steering wheel with buttons for turn signals instead of traditional st...
Falcon doors hit obstacles
Despite sensors, the falcon wing doors sometimes hit adjacent cars' mirrors and continue pushing aga...
Falcon doors sensor confusion
The falcon wing doors use sensors to detect obstacles and prevent opening fully if someone stands di...
Extensive data collection
Tesla collects vast amounts of personal, vehicle, driving, location, infotainment, app, and Autopilo...
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about the 2026 Tesla Model X
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