
A camouflaged Lucid Cosmos prototype has been spotted testing on public roads near the Lucid factory in Casa Grande, Arizona. The photo shows the midsize SUV right next to a Tesla Model Y, giving us our best real-world size comparison yet.
The sighting comes as Lucid prepares for the Cosmos’s full public unveil this summer, with production slated for late 2026.
The photo, shared on X by user @john61640, shows the Cosmos covered in black-and-white camouflage wrap — standard practice for pre-production prototypes undergoing road testing. What makes the image particularly telling is the Tesla Model Y parked right next to it at what appears to be an intersection near Lucid’s Arizona plant.
The two vehicles look remarkably similar in size, confirming what Lucid has been saying about the Cosmos’s positioning. The midsize SUV is a direct competitor to the best-selling EV in the world.
The Cosmos is Lucid’s make-or-break vehicle
Lucid announced the Cosmos and Earth SUVs at its Investor Day event in March as the first two models riding on its new midsize platform. With prices starting under $50,000, they represent a massive step down from the six-figure Air sedan and Gravity SUV — and a necessary one for Lucid to achieve the volume it needs to reach profitability.
The Cosmos promises 300 miles of range from a relatively small 69 kWh battery, thanks to Lucid’s industry-leading efficiency of up to 4.5 mi/kWh. That’s 10% more efficient than any comparable midsize EV. The SUV can also regain over 200 miles of range in just 14 minutes of DC fast charging and hit 60 mph in 3.5 seconds in all-wheel-drive configuration.
Those are impressive specs on paper, especially considering the price point. The Model Y starts at $39,990, but a comparably equipped dual-motor version is over $45,000. The Cosmos, at under $50,000, will likely overlap significantly with the Model Y’s price range while offering Lucid’s trademark efficiency advantage.
A key enabler behind the lower price is Lucid’s new Atlas drive unit, which is 40% more power-dense than competitors, with 30% fewer parts and 37% cost savings compared to the Zeus unit used in the Gravity. Lucid has also designed the midsize platform for dramatically improved manufacturability.
As we’ve been tracking since last year, Lucid’s midsize program has been building momentum. The first prototypes appeared at Nikola’s former headquarters in mid-2025, and the company confirmed three $50,000 “top hats” would ride on the platform: the Cosmos (efficiency-focused), the Earth (adventure-focused), and a yet-unnamed third model.
Timing couldn’t be more competitive
The Cosmos is entering a midsize EV market that is about to get far more crowded. The Tesla Model Y remains the dominant force, selling an estimated 78,591 units in the US in Q1 2026 alone — roughly one out of every three EVs sold in the country. But competition is mounting from every direction.
Rivian’s R2 is expected to start deliveries soon, priced under $50,000. The Chevrolet Equinox EV has been gaining traction at around $35,000. And in China, the Xiaomi YU7 actually overtook the Model Y as the best-selling EV in January 2026 — proof that the world’s largest EV market has developed domestic alternatives capable of displacing Tesla.
Lucid’s challenge is different from those competitors. While Rivian and Chevy are competing on price, Lucid is competing on technology and efficiency. The 300-mile range from a 69 kWh battery is a significant engineering achievement — most competitors need 75-82 kWh batteries to achieve comparable range. That translates directly to lower battery costs and, eventually, better margins.
The Cosmos will also come equipped with bidirectional charging, enabling vehicle-to-home (V2H), vehicle-to-load (V2L), and vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) capabilities — features Tesla still hasn’t shipped on the Model Y other than in the Performance version.
Electrek’s Take
Seeing the Cosmos out testing on public roads near the factory is an encouraging sign that Lucid is on track for its summer unveil and late-2026 production start. The side-by-side comparison with a Model Y is the most useful visual we’ve gotten so far — the Cosmos looks like a genuine midsize competitor, not an oversized luxury SUV trying to play in a smaller segment.
The specs Lucid has outlined for the Cosmos are legitimately impressive: 300 miles from 69 kWh, 3.5 seconds to 60 mph, 200 miles of range added in 14 minutes, all under $50,000. If Lucid can actually deliver on those numbers at scale, the Cosmos would be the most efficient midsize electric SUV on the market by a meaningful margin.
The big question, as always with Lucid, is execution. The company has a history of building incredible technology and then struggling with production volume. Lucid’s 2026 production guidance is 25,000-27,000 vehicles, still modest numbers. The Cosmos needs to be the vehicle that changes that trajectory. Lucid plans to start production at its AMP-2 plant in Saudi Arabia first, with US production at the Arizona facility following 6-12 months later, which means North American customers may need to wait until 2027 for deliveries.
We’ll get a much better picture when Lucid fully unveils the Cosmos this summer. For now, at least we know it’s out there, running laps around the Arizona desert right next to the car it’s trying to beat.
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