BTW, if you run the city and highway MPG info according to the NHTSB it comes out to 68 MPG combined for $6,800
This is nice and catchy and I'm not sure why Elio isn't using this in advertisements.

Welcome to Elio Owners! Join today, registration is easy!
You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.I was thinking on how that $6800.00 number came about. Not $6900, not $7000 not $6700.
and will they actually be able to deliver a vehicle at $6800?
inflation and delays make this harder and harder as every day passes by.
You cannot buy a new Motorcycle for $6800. so how disappointed would you be if they missed that mark?
You cannot buy a new Motorcycle for $6800. so how disappointed would you be if they missed that mark?
I can't pass this one up....
Where did they come up with $1300.00 for a macbook pro?
How do they come up with $3.xx for gasoline?
My mailbox cost $35.00...how come?
If an orange was named because of the color, why isn't a banana called a "yellow" ?
Craig, thanks for providing this information again. It is helpful to the many people who have recently joined the forum and the Elio movement.Why is 84 MPG/$6,800 so impactful? Because it’s a lot better than 23 MPG/$32,068!
As a fan of Elio Motors and the vehicle, you know that we continually drill home two really important benefits that some thought impossible but we plan to make reality.
84 MPG and $6,800.
We say it again and again and again. Why? Because these two targets are what drives Elio Motors and what will ultimately drive you.
These figures – 84 MPG and $6,800 are radical improvements compared to industry averages, and today’s consumer is clamoring for something this affordable and this fuel efficient.
The average new vehicle price in 2013 was $32,068, according to industry pricing guide Kelley Blue Book, while the average EPA fuel economy estimate for 2013 was 23 MPG. Let that sink in -- $32,068 and 23 MPG. With an Elio, consumers get nearly three times the gas mileage for around one-fifth the price.
“Vehicle affordability is really out of balance,” said Paul Elio, CEO of Elio Motors. “The weak economy has suppressed earnings for most people, but the cost of a new vehicle continues to go up. It really is an unsustainable course.”
If a consumer placed a 20 percent down payment on an average vehicle, they would still need to finance more than $25,000. For a 48-month loan, that means they will pay more than $600 per month. It’s a hefty price tag, and it’s far too much for most people in the United States. With gas at $4 per gallon, it costs $2,600 to drive 15,000 miles in a vehicle with average fuel efficiency. Driving the same distance in an Elio at $4 per gallon will cost less than $1,000, which is obviously a significant savings.
Of course, millions of vehicles on the road today get significantly lower than average fuel efficiency. Most of these “clunkers” are low-cost vehicles owned by people who don’t believe a new vehicle is within their price range. For these consumers, Elio Motors will be a true game changer. Instead of driving an unreliable, low-mileage vehicle, “clunker” owners will now be able to afford a new vehicle that costs four times less to operate and comes with a three-year, 36,000 mile warranty.
“High vehicle costs, high operating costs and high maintenance costs drag down the affordability of most used vehicles,” Elio said. “We are providing our own version of "Cash for Clunkers" that will help get many of these vehicles off the road. So, when we hit our sales targets, we will help to reduce fuel consumption by 0.35 percent. That’s significant.”
For Elio, it was a matter of challenging people’s mindset about transportation. Sure, families need the functionality offered by a pickup truck, an SUV or a minivan. There are projects to do, sports to play and vacations to take. Often, these require a big vehicle with a lot of seats. And, of course, the car companies are more than willing to manufacture and sell these vehicles. Pickups, SUVs and minivans are very profitable.
But, why not have a second vehicle for all those days when you aren’t doing a project, heading to a ball game or heading up to the cottage? Most work commutes – 76.3 percent, in fact – are driven solo. So, why not own a second, more affordable vehicle for those trips?
As long as vehicle prices and operating costs remain high, Elio will remain a winning solution for all.
If Elio does raise the price to $7300 what has $1000 for 15ish months early gotten us?
I look at $1000 all is a “buying stock “in Elio with a possible 50% dividend, but if the price goes to $7300 where’s my dividend? I understand you can win or lose in stocks, but Elio continues to advertise $6800, but going to $7300 is changing what I invested in.
If I invest in a company that is going to manufacture Timex watches then after getting my money declares they are now going to manufacture Longines watches, the playing field has now changed.
As many of us believed in Elio, to give them our brass, where will our thank you be if the price goes to $7300? Because in the dollars and cents of it all, why not have waited until the car hit the streets to buy one.
Yes I understand without the early birds, Elio would now have gotten to the streets, but were we all not put here to make Paul rich. If he needed the money then going public would have been the proper thing to do.
For as I see it, if the Elio goes to $7300, and I put $1000 in early, I’ve been duped.
I ask ANYONE here would you have given Honda, GM or Toyota $1000 on a dream?
I think Paul is a standup guy but if that price goes to $7300 without compensation to the early birds, big business will have prevailed again.