Well, I have an update and official reply from Lucid, and unfortunately, it doesn’t suggest the company is making any meaningful effort to review or revise its policies, or the actions of its financial partners.
I wrote a summary of my lease-end dispute, explaining how Lucid or its partners are violating Lucid’s own written standards for what constitutes excess wear and tear. More importantly, I described the brand damage this is causing and referenced these forum discussions. I sent it
privately to a single Lucid Financial executive, hoping he might offer some assurance that this issue is being taken seriously. (I understand I can’t mention his name or title on this forum, so I won’t.)
After
12 days with no response—not even a simple acknowledgment—I followed up, this time copying a select few Lucid Motors executives (again, I guess I can't name them here, but it was
appropriate members of Lucid's executive team, not a blast to everyone I could think of or find on the website).
I want to be clear: I gave the original recipient nearly two weeks to reply privately before escalating. I would have preferred to keep the discussion one-on-one, but silence for 12 days felt like a dead end.
Interestingly, after I copied the Lucid Motors execs, the Lucid Financial exec responded quickly—replying-all to the full group.
Here’s his reply, verbatim:
Hello {my full name},
Thank you for reaching out to Lucid regarding your concerns related to the excess wear charges on your former Lucid lease vehicle. Lucid has reviewed your lease end inspection and has decided to waive the charges that are in question. We hope that this goodwill will encourage you to continue to be a customer of Lucid. We appreciate your support for Lucid.
That 's it. I'm not truncating or editing the email.
(For context for those who don't recall or aren't tracking my personal issue: I was charged $200 for
excess wear on my wheels due to a
single small blemish—photo here (their photo from the official inspection, not mine):
Lucid’s own
published standards define unacceptable wheel damage at a lease return as wheels that are "cracked, bent, or broken." That's it, that's the complete description of what can be assessed as excess wear and tear. Look at the image: which of those three terms applies?)
To say this email response was disappointing is an understatement. My issue was never about the $200 they were charging me. It was about how Lucid and its finance partners are applying charges that directly contradict Lucid’s stated policy, and how that’s affecting many of us, as echoed in this forum.
By labeling this a “goodwill” gesture and saying they’ve “decided to waive” the charge, Lucid is signaling that the fee was valid, their policy was properly applied, and no internal changes are under consideration. There was no apology, no admission of error, and no mention of any review—either by Lucid Financial or their inspection partner.
I had hoped for at least a line acknowledging the issue, like “Thanks for raising this. We’re looking into it.” Instead, the message was clear: if you make enough noise and escalate high enough, you might get your charge waived. Otherwise, you're out of luck. In essence, in my own view, they’re saying, “We’ve heard you, and because you were loud enough, we’ll drop this charge for you. But we’re not changing anything.”
It’s hard not to conclude that no changes are planned. If they were even considering it, I’d expect some hint in the response, especially knowing I’m sharing updates publicly and speaking with a journalist about the issue.
So good luck to others still fighting this... or to those who soon will be. I have to assume every single lease return will face this issue as my car was as close to perfect as I can imagine.
I deeply regret that I’m now locked into a second Lucid lease (which was finalized before I even got the absurd inspection report from the first).
Lucid has lost me as a customer and as an advocate.
Like all of us, I get compliments on my car on a weekly, if not daily, basis. I no longer rave about the company or the product. I now state that the car has some technical issues, but overall is nicely built, has class-leading interior packaging and comfort, and has great performance and overall driving feel, but that I do not recommend doing business with the company and I've had a terrible personal experience as a two-time owner. I walk away and leave it at that. It's happened twice this week, and it will keep happening for the remaining 17 months on this unfortunate lease that I have.