Lucid Motors is finally preparing to enter the most important segment of the electric vehicle market. After years focused on high-priced luxury models like the Air sedan and Gravity SUV, the company’s next move aims directly at the heart of Tesla territory.
New spy photos appear to show Lucid’s upcoming midsize electric SUV testing in Arizona alongside a Tesla Model Y. The side-by-side sighting gives one of the clearest looks yet at what is believed to be the new Lucid Cosmos, a smaller and far more affordable EV designed to dramatically expand the brand’s reach.
The significance of this vehicle cannot be overstated for Lucid. While the company has earned praise for efficiency, range, and advanced EV engineering, its products have remained financially out of reach for most buyers. Even the recently launched Gravity SUV starts around the luxury price bracket, leaving Lucid competing in a relatively small corner of the market.
The Cosmos changes that strategy entirely. Lucid is targeting a starting price below $50,000, placing the SUV directly against mainstream premium EVs like the Tesla Model Y, Rivian R2, and future electric crossovers from legacy automakers.
Spy Photos Reveal A Smaller Lucid Formula
This photo was taken near the Lucid factory. Could this be one of the midsize vehicles? pic.twitter.com/oHngFSS2Wd
— John (@john61640) May 21, 2026
The camouflaged prototype was spotted near Lucid’s Arizona facility and photographed beside a pre-facelift Tesla Model Y. While Lucid has not officially confirmed the vehicle’s identity, several design cues strongly match earlier teasers released by the company.
The proportions immediately stand out. Compared with the larger Gravity, the new SUV appears noticeably more compact and lower to the ground. At the same time, it seems slightly wider and more planted than the Tesla beside it.
Lucid’s signature sleek roofline remains intact, and the front quarter-window design closely resembles previous concept previews. The prototype also appears to wear wheel designs similar to those found on certain Gravity trims.

Inside, only limited details are visible through the camouflage and reflections, but the dashboard appears to feature a large digital display stretching far across the cabin. That aligns with earlier teaser images Lucid released while discussing its upcoming midsize platform.
Lucid Wants To Bring Luxury EV Tech Downmarket
The Cosmos is expected to ride on Lucid’s new midsize EV architecture, a platform specifically designed to reduce costs while preserving the company’s reputation for efficiency and performance.
Lucid recently confirmed that the platform will underpin at least three future vehicles. The Cosmos is expected to serve as the practical family-oriented SUV in the lineup, while another model called Earth will target buyers looking for a more adventurous and performance-focused experience. A third model remains under wraps.
The company says these new vehicles will retain the same “Lucid DNA” found in the Air and Gravity. That includes strong driving dynamics, advanced packaging efficiency, and class-leading range potential.
One of Lucid’s biggest advantages has always been efficiency. The Air sedan established itself as one of the longest-range EVs on the market, and the Gravity SUV continues that trend despite its larger footprint. Lucid appears determined to carry those engineering strengths into lower-priced vehicles.
A Smaller Platform Designed To Cut Costs
Keeping prices below $50,000 will require a very different manufacturing strategy than Lucid’s current flagship models. To achieve that, the company developed a simplified EV platform using its newer Atlas electric drive units.
These motors are designed to be smaller, lighter, and easier to manufacture. Lucid also standardized components between front and rear drive units to simplify assembly and reduce production costs.
The company’s efficiency advantage may also allow it to use smaller battery packs without significantly sacrificing driving range. Since batteries remain one of the most expensive parts of any EV, reducing battery size without hurting usability could become one of Lucid’s biggest competitive advantages.
Single-motor and dual-motor variants are both expected once the Cosmos reaches production. Lucid has not released official performance specifications yet, but expectations are high given the company’s history with powerful electric drivetrains.
Lucid Needs A Volume Seller

The upcoming midsize lineup represents a major turning point for Lucid as a company. The Air and Gravity have helped establish the brand’s engineering credibility, but neither vehicle competes in the volume-heavy segments that dominate EV sales globally.
That is where the Cosmos becomes critical. The midsize electric SUV category remains one of the fastest-growing areas of the automotive industry, and Tesla’s Model Y continues to set the benchmark for sales volume.
If Lucid can deliver comparable practicality, impressive range, and a more premium interior experience at a competitive price, it could finally attract buyers who have admired the brand from afar but could never justify the cost.
The challenge, however, is timing. Lucid is still ramping up Gravity production while simultaneously developing an entirely new platform. The company has not confirmed a launch date for the Cosmos, though current expectations point toward a debut sometime before the end of the decade.
For now, the spy shots offer the clearest sign yet that Lucid’s most important vehicle is finally taking shape. The company already proved it can build world-class luxury EVs. The next challenge is proving it can do the same thing at a price mainstream buyers can actually afford.
