Lucid Motors on Tuesday listed additional units of its new Gravity SUV for purchase, after the first batch of inventory vehicles posted on Saturday sold out within 24 hours.
The second batch again consisted exclusively of the Grand Touring trim, as the lower-priced Gravity Touring will only begin production later this year.
The timeline for the production kick-off of the cheaper variant, according to guidance management reaffirmed earlier this month at the IAA Mobility show in Munich.
Unlike the initial set of listings, which were mostly five-seat Grand Touring models starting from $96,550 and shown as “available in two weeks,” the latest inventory included a broader mix of specifications, some marked as “available now.”
Among them were seven-seat Aurora Green models priced at $104,650 in Orange County and $108,350 in the San Francisco Bay Area, both with 437 miles of estimated range and Mojave or Tahoe leather interiors.
Also listed was a five-seat Abyss Black unit in Chicago with a 407-mile range, priced at $114,100, fitted with a Yosemite interior and 22-inch Aether Stealth wheels.
The higher sticker prices and diversity of features suggest these are “orphan units” — vehicles whose exact configurations did not align with existing customer orders.
In normal fulfillment, pre-order holders are prioritized, meaning unmatched builds are redirected into the public inventory pool for quicker sale amid the quarter-end sales push.
Saturday’s initial batch of vehicles, which included multiple five-seat Grand Touring trims priced from $96,550 and listed as “available in two weeks” across several states, was fully sold by Sunday evening.
Lucid’s head of communications, Nick Twork, emphasized in posts that the listings were driven by production dynamics rather than weaker demand, noting that the process allowed customers to “skip the wait” and select from a limited pool of completed vehicles.
On Monday, drone footage captured at Lucid’s Casa Grande, Arizona, facility showed more than 2,000 Gravity SUVs parked across staging lots, with several units seen undergoing suspension and braking tests.
The images showed a production ramp-up following second-quarter supply chain disruptions that nearly halted output earlier this year.
The Gravity Grand Touring, currently the only trim offered in the United States, starts from $94,900. The Gravity Touring is expected to join the lineup later in 2025.
Separately on Tuesday, the first Gravity to appear on the second-hand market — a 2026 Dream Edition — sold for $131,000 on the auction site Cars & Bids after 43 bids, including 18 in the closing hours.









