Yes—Tesla is headquartered in Austin, Texas, trades on the Nasdaq, and employs roughly 134,785 people worldwide as a US-based automaker.
Yes, Tesla, Inc. is an American company. It is headquartered in Austin, Texas, trades publicly on a US stock exchange, and builds electric vehicles and energy products through a workforce of roughly 134,785 employees. For a company that has become synonymous with electric cars, the American answer is straightforward once you look at where it's registered, where it's run, and where its stock changes hands.
Where Tesla Is Headquartered
Tesla's headquarters sits in Austin, Texas, the hub from which the company directs its global operations. Headquarters location is one of the clearest markers of a company's home base, and Tesla's is firmly on US soil.
A Company Born in 2003
Tesla was founded in 2003, giving it more than two decades of history as an American automaker. That origin point matters because it establishes Tesla not as a recent transplant but as a company that grew up within the US business and regulatory environment from the start.
Listed on the Nasdaq
Tesla trades under the ticker TSLA on the Nasdaq, a US stock exchange. Its shares became publicly available with an IPO in June 2010, meaning American and global investors have been able to buy into the company through a domestic exchange for well over a decade.

Market Value Today
Tesla currently carries a market capitalization of $1.5 trillion, one of the largest in the vehicles industry. That scale reflects a company whose financial center of gravity, at least as measured by where its stock lists and trades, is squarely American.
What Tesla Actually Builds
Tesla is a vertically integrated battery electric vehicle automaker and a developer of real-world artificial intelligence software, including autonomous driving and humanoid robots. Its fleet spans luxury and midsize sedans, crossover SUVs, a light truck, and a semi truck, with plans for a sports car and a robotaxi service.
Beyond the Car Lot
The company doesn't stop at vehicles. Tesla also sells batteries for stationary storage used by residential and commercial properties, including utilities, alongside solar panels and solar products—an energy business that runs parallel to its automotive line.
A Global Sales Footprint
In 2025, Tesla delivered nearly 1.64 million vehicles worldwide, a figure that underscores just how far its reach extends beyond American borders even as its corporate home stays in Texas. Being an American company doesn't mean selling only to American customers—it means where the business is legally and operationally rooted.
The Numbers Behind the Name
Tesla's FY2025 revenue reached $94.8 billion, with net income of $3.8 billion and total assets of $137.8 billion. Those figures place Tesla among the larger players in the American vehicles industry by almost any financial measure.
The Verdict
Putting it together: Tesla is headquartered in Austin, Texas, was founded in the United States in 2003, trades on the Nasdaq under TSLA, and is listed in the americancompanies.com directory of US-based companies. By every marker available here—headquarters, stock listing, and directory status—Tesla qualifies as an American company, even as its vehicles and energy products reach customers around the world.

