GM Offering Reimbursement to Early Chevy Blazer EV Owners

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

General Motors desperately needed its next-generation EVs to make a good impression. The company is fighting Ford and others in a race to match and outperform Tesla, but it hasn’t had the best luck along the way. After announcing that Ultium-based EVs would not offer Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, GM issued a stop sale for the Chevy Blazer EV over software issues. The issues were bad enough for the automaker to offer an olive branch to early owners in the form of a financial reimbursement.


Edmunds reported that it received a letter from the automaker that outlined a $5,620 reimbursement for their 2024 Chevy Blazer EV. Since it lowered the EV’s price upon lifting the stop-sale order, owners who paid more might be eligible for some money back. The publication purchased a Blazer EV for long-term testing and noted that it had worked fine since a dealer installed a planned software update.


Beyond software frustrations, the reimbursement will be welcome for owners. The Blazer EV is still expensive after the price cuts, and Chevy missed its price targets for the Equinox EV, so GM’s stable is notably empty of affordable electric models. The automaker will revive the reasonably priced Bolt EV soon, but there’s no word on whether the move to an Ultium platform for the car would impact the price.


The move away from Apple CarPlay and Android Auto is seen as somewhat of a cash grab. By removing a software layer in favor of an in-house interface, GM can control subscriptions and other services that increase after-sales revenues. Of course, the tech still needs to work, so GM has its work cut out to keep things running smoothly.


[Image: Chevrolet/GM]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Ravenuer Few years ago, my wife decided she liked red, so we are on our 2nd red suv. The only thing is, in a parking lot there seems to be more and more red suvs!
  • Redapple2 Sorry. I like white. Current car is a deep, lustrous, metal flake pearl white. Gorgeous. Better than the $1300 upgrade on a Yukon Denali. White:-helps with visibility. Safe.-hides dirt.-more potential customers at resale.I have owned Gold, Buckingham Blue, candy apple red (x2). Might do those again.
  • Ger65690267 I travel around the World, it's the same thing. Mostly white, greys, black, an occasional red, and that's about it.Blue for some reason is pretty rare, and anything out of the above spectrum is like seeing a unicorn.
  • Cprescott Looks like a Chevy with tacky accents and a dashboard borrowed from a Kia.
  • Cprescott Are you paying for that car? I will have my favorite - black.
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