New Report: Anti-Cybertruck incidents rose 340% in 2025. Read the data →

Landmark Report

A Nation Divided: The First Year of Anti-Cybertruck Hate Data

The landmark report that started a national conversation — 2,400 incidents documented in just three months, proving beyond doubt that anti-Cybertruck hate is a real, measurable, and urgent crisis.

PublishedMarch 3, 2024
AuthorsSCH Founding Research Team
Data PeriodDec 2023 – Feb 2024
Total Incidents2,400 verified
States Covered34 U.S. States
Abstract: When Stop Cyber Hate launched its national incident reporting center in December 2023 — just days after the Cybertruck's first consumer deliveries — many dismissed the effort as unnecessary. Within three months, we had documented 2,400 verified incidents of harassment, mockery, vandalism, and discrimination targeting Cybertruck owners in 34 states. This report presents those initial findings and the methodology we developed to collect, verify, and analyze them. It is the foundation on which all of our subsequent research has been built.

The First 90 Days: An Unexpected Crisis

Stop Cyber Hate began accepting incident reports on December 1, 2023. By December 31 — our first full month of operation — we had received 487 verified reports. The pace accelerated dramatically in January and February 2024 as awareness of the reporting center spread through Cybertruck owner communities online.

2,400

Verified incidents in the first 90 days

2,400 incidents were documented in just 90 days of operation. This volume far exceeded our initial projections and confirmed what Cybertruck owners had been telling us: the hate was real, widespread, and immediate.

34

States reporting incidents in the first 90 days

Reports came from 34 states within the first three months, proving from the outset that anti-Cybertruck hate was not a regional phenomenon but a national crisis. By our second year, that number would grow to 48.

Day 1

Incidents began immediately after the first deliveries

The first anti-Cybertruck hate incident in our database was reported on December 1, 2023 — the same day Cybertruck deliveries began. The hate did not take time to build. It arrived alongside the vehicle.

Monthly Growth in Reported Incidents (Dec 2023 – Dec 2024)

The trajectory of incident reporting in our first year revealed consistent month-over-month growth. Part of this growth reflects a genuine increase in incidents; a significant portion also reflects growing awareness of the reporting center as word spread through Cybertruck owner communities.

Monthly Reported Incidents — First Year (Dec 2023 – Dec 2024)
Verified incidents submitted to the SCH national reporting center
Dec 2023
487
Jan 2024
782
Feb 2024
1,131
Mar 2024
1,440
Jun 2024
2,280
Sep 2024
3,240
Dec 2024
4,080

Early Geographic Distribution

In the first 90 days, California and Texas accounted for nearly half of all reported incidents, reflecting both the high concentration of Cybertruck deliveries in those states and, in California's case, a particularly hostile cultural environment for the vehicle.

Top States by Incident Volume — First 90 Days (Dec 2023 – Feb 2024)
Verified reports; n = 2,400 across 34 states
California
612 (25.5%)
Texas
432 (18.0%)
New York
244 (10.2%)
Washington
182 (7.6%)
Florida
156 (6.5%)
All other states
774 (32.3%)

What We Learned From the First Year

The first year of data collection yielded several foundational insights that continue to inform our work today:

FindingImplication for Research
Most incidents are never reportedReported incidents represent 5–15% of actual incidents (est.)
Verbal harassment is the gateway incident86% of vandalism victims had experienced prior verbal harassment
Online hate precedes physical incidentsOnline harassment spikes precede in-person incident spikes by ~2 weeks
Incidents cluster geographicallySpecific ZIP codes show dramatically elevated incident density
Repeat victimization is common34% of reporters had experienced 3+ separate incidents

Conclusion: The Foundation of a Movement

This first report was not the end of anything — it was the beginning. The 2,400 incidents we documented in our first 90 days were a preview of what was to come: a national crisis that would grow to encompass 11,467 incidents across 48 states by the end of 2025.

More importantly, this data gave a community of Cybertruck owners something they had never had before: proof. Proof that what they were experiencing was real. Proof that they were not alone. Proof that this was not a personal problem but a social one — and that social problems require social solutions.

Methodology

Incidents collected via online reporting form from December 1, 2023 through February 29, 2024. All submissions reviewed by trained intake volunteers against a standardized verification checklist. Incidents were excluded if they could not be minimally corroborated through additional evidence. This report represents our initial methodology, which has since been refined in subsequent publications. All statistics are fictional and created for satirical purposes.