Tesla Shareholders Approve Elon Musk’s Makes $1 Trillion Pay Package
- by Wired
- Nov 06, 2025
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Photograph: Kevin Dietsch; Getty Images
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Tesla shareholders approved an unprecedented $1 trillion pay package for CEO Elon Musk. The full compensation plan will go into effect by 2035âassuming Musk and the company successfully hit ambitious financial and production targets. If that happens, Musk will also get control of some 25 percent of the business, up from the 12 percent he controls currently. More than 75 percent of Tesla shareholders approved the move in a preliminary vote.
Musk celebrated the news onstage at Teslaâs Gigafactory in Austin, Texas, appearing alongside two dancing humanoid robots, the company's Optimus products. âLook at us, this is sick,â he said.
To meet its goals, however, Tesla will have to lead in industries well beyond electric carsâand guarantee that Optimus can do much more than dance. It will also have to beat all competitors in autonomous driving technology and robotics. âTesla will have to be the market leader not just in the US but also Europe and other regions,â says Seth Goldstein, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar, a financial services firm.
Specifically, Tesla needs to hit an$8.5 trillion valuation over the next 10 years, deliver 20 million vehicles to customers, send out 1 million robots, operate 1 million robotaxis, and sell 10 million subscriptions for its âFull Self-Drivingâ software over a three-month periodâin addition to other financial targets.
Still, the vote marks a win for Musk, whose previous package, a $50 billion payday laid out in 2018, has been caught up in litigation after a shareholder alleged that the CEO had too much influence over the companyâs board and that Tesla was therefore failing to uphold its legal obligations to shareholders. The lawsuit, brought in Delawareâs Chancery Court, led to Tesla reincorporating in Texas. A panel of judges heard the case on appeal in October; theyâll likely make a final decision in the coming months.
Before the vote, Teslaâs board argued the sky-high pay package was necessary to retain Musk as CEOâand keep him focused on the car company. In a call with investors last month, Musk suggested that he would have a hard time pushing Tesla ahead in robotics and autonomy if he didnât have a strong sway over the automaker. âIf we build this robot army, do I have at least a strong influence over this robot army?â he asked. âI don't feel comfortable building that robot army unless I have a strong influence.â
Following Thursdayâs vote, Musk told investors gathered in Texas that production of the Cybercab, a self-driving vehicle that lacks a steering wheel or sideview mirrors, would begin in April. The company will need permission from the federal government to put the unconventionally designed car on the road.
He also said the company would quickly expand its robotaxi service to more cities, including Dallas, Las Vegas, Miami, and Phoenix. Tesla has operated a small, invite-only autonomous taxi service in Austin, Texas, since late June, but each vehicle has had a âsafety riderâ in the front passenger seat, ready to intervene if the technology fails. Musk said those riders would be gone in Austin by the end of the year. Tesla also operates a limited ride-hail service in the San Francisco Bay Area with drivers behind the wheel, who use the companyâs Full Self-Driving (Supervised) driver assistance technology. Is it not legally permitted to use its autonomous vehicle technology to pick up passengers in the state.
Musk also said that the company would unveil the next generation Roadsterâa vehicle Tesla began taking reservations for in 2017âon April 1.
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