Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) shares fell 7% as investors reacted to reports that the electric vehicle maker is introducing new limits on employee spending for artificial intelligence software while giving preferential treatment to Grok, the chatbot developed by Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI.
According to reports, Tesla will cap employee spending on AI tools at $200 per week beginning July 6. Any spending above that threshold will require approval from a manager. However, Grok will be exempt from the new policy, meaning employees can continue using the AI assistant without the same budget restrictions.
The move has drawn attention because it further deepens the relationship between Tesla and xAI, two companies led by Musk that have increasingly aligned their artificial intelligence ambitions.
The exemption for Grok signals Tesla’s intention to encourage wider adoption of Musk’s in-house AI ecosystem instead of relying heavily on third-party software providers.
Although Tesla employees have access to several AI assistants, reports suggest that Grok has not yet become the preferred workplace tool. Many workers reportedly continue to use Claude, the AI model developed by Anthropic, for research, coding, document creation, and other daily tasks.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
Anthropic currently offers its Team subscription starting at $25 per user each month for standard access, while its Premium plan costs $125 per user per month, with additional usage credits available for customers requiring higher workloads.
Tesla’s spending cap may encourage employees to evaluate their AI usage more carefully while potentially increasing Grok adoption over time.
The latest policy reflects Musk’s broader effort to weave xAI‘s technology into Tesla’s products and internal operations.
Tesla has already confirmed plans to introduce Grok into selected vehicle infotainment systems in Europe, giving drivers access to conversational AI directly through their cars. However, Musk has clarified that the chatbot will initially serve as an informational and conversational assistant rather than controlling vehicle functions.
That distinction suggests Tesla is taking a gradual approach to deploying AI features in its vehicles, prioritizing user interaction before expanding into more advanced capabilities.
The company’s AI strategy extends beyond vehicles. Tesla has repeatedly emphasized the importance of artificial intelligence in autonomous driving, robotics, manufacturing efficiency, and customer experiences, making software an increasingly important part of its long-term growth narrative.
Tesla’s reported spending policy arrives as major technology companies continue investing billions of dollars into artificial intelligence infrastructure and software.
Rather than simply increasing spending across every available AI platform, Tesla appears to be directing more attention toward its own ecosystem. Encouraging employees to use Grok could help consolidate AI development internally while reducing dependence on external providers over the long term.
Still, the reported preference among employees for Claude highlights that internal adoption cannot be achieved through policy alone. Workers often prioritize tools based on performance, reliability, and productivity, meaning Grok will likely need to demonstrate competitive capabilities if it is to become Tesla’s primary workplace AI assistant.
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