Renault Trafic vs Tesla Model S

What's the difference?

VS
Renault Trafic
Renault Trafic

$49,990 - $67,255

2025 price

Tesla Model S
Tesla Model S

$23,888 - $69,980

2017 price

Summary

2025 Renault Trafic
2017 Tesla Model S
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Diesel Turbo 4, 2.0L

Not Applicable, 0.0L
Fuel Type
Diesel

Electric
Fuel Efficiency
6.5L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
3

5
Dislikes
  • No ANCAP star rating
  • No driver’s left footrest
  • Paying extra for safety

  • Sadly, it's not a sports car
  • It's a lot of money
  • Lack of convenient charging
2025 Renault Trafic Summary

After more than four decades in production and global sales exceeding 2.2 million units, the Trafic has established a loyal following in Australia.

In fact, according to Renault, Australia is the largest market for its popular mid-sized van outside of Europe. Perhaps this is not surprising given our thriving light commercial vehicle market, in which the 2.5-3.5-tonne GVM van segment is one of the most competitive with eight brands vying for buyers.

The current (third) generation Trafic, which was given a facelift and upgraded equipment/safety in 2022, is available in eight configurations. These include a crew van variant plus two wheelbase lengths and three equipment levels comprising Pro, Premium and Lifestyle.

We recently became reacquainted with the Trafic, in base model workhorse guise, to see how it compares to the current crop of rivals from a tradie’s perspective.

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2017 Tesla Model S Summary

If you have even a passing interest in the Tesla Model S, you'll have seen the endless internet videos where someone has lined up a Ferrari, Lamborghini, or another fast exotic car you could name, to race against it.

There's a long build-up, usually involving men who can't operate a baseball cap, a drag strip and idiotic words in the headline like "destroys" or "rips", or whatever. There's usually a bunch of honking bros with bad haircuts watching on, already planning their next viral video where they set a perfectly good mobile phone on fire.

It's facile and idiotic and doesn't give you any real clue as to the depth of whatever supercar it has "humiliated" or, just as importantly, the depth of the Model S and its spectacular engineering.

So, I won't be spending the next thousand words building up to the conclusion that the Model S P100D with Ludicrous Mode is up there with the world's fastest production cars from 0-100km/h, because I'll tell you now that it is, and it does it in a claimed 2.7 seconds.

Now that's out of the way, there's quite a bit more to the Model S than a "broken" Nissan GT-R owner weeping into their bento box.

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Deep dive comparison

2025 Renault Trafic 2017 Tesla Model S

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