EV maker Scout Motors wants to sell directly to buyers but can't do it
in its home state
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[February 07, 2025] By
JEFFREY COLLINS
BLYTHEWOOD, S.C. (AP) — Volkswagen-backed Scout Motors is making a
massive bet in the electric SUV market with a carefully cultivated
experience that will allow some customers to buy the company's vehicle
in minutes on an app and then use it to handle everything after from
repairs to updates and upgrades.
But without some help from lawmakers, that will be impossible in South
Carolina, where the company is pouring billions into its new auto plant
and a Scout Motors experience like BMW's test track in Greer.
In a world where almost everything can be bought online, automobiles
remain an exception. Supporters of the dealership model say the
experience allows buyers to compare prices across several businesses.
Unlike a pair of pants, where color, style and size are about the only
concerns, buying a car involves financing, state registration, taxes,
regulations — and often a test drive.
South Carolina is one of about two dozen states that ban manufacturers
from selling vehicles directly to consumers and instead require all new
autos be purchased through a dealer. Scout would like to see that
practice changed nationwide for all EV makers and figured it could start
in its new backyard.
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South Carolina also bans manufacturers from owning their own service
centers, which means anyone who wants to own a Scout SUV must travel to
another state to have it repaired or serviced.
People who back the dealership structure said online sales could lead to
carmakers raising their own prices with less competition.
The dealership structure requires local business owners to back what
they sell and assure buyers get quality service on their vehicles. Auto
dealers often have close ties to their communities and cities could lose
one of their biggest businesses and heftiest taxpayers.
“If for some reason the car is a lemon or the job isn't getting done,
they are the folks who live there, who pay their taxes and send their
kids to school,” said Republican Sen. Larry Grooms, who runs the Senate
Transportation Committee where any bill changing the rules would likely
end up.
Scout is determined to get the law changed to help them as well as other
EV makers like Tesla and Rivian. They have gone on a media blitz that
includes stories in local outlets. They are also trying to secure
support in a Republican-dominated state with an argument that consumers
should be free to buy whatever they wish directly, without a middleman.
Scout also is armed with a 2000 Attorney General's Office opinion on the
bill which would weeks later would become law and serve as the most
recent major overhaul to South Carolina's laws on new car buying.
“If a manufacturer cannot sell his own product, but must
constitutionally pass that product through a ‘middle man,’ then our
understanding of the free market system is way off base. The Internet is
a worldwide web for trade, not a local instrument for protectionism,”
wrote then-Republican state Attorney General Charlie Condon in the
opinion, which is not binding and an educated guess on what a judge
might do if someone sued over the law.
Scout officials say using a dealership-only business model would make
the vehicles aimed at the under-$60,000 market too expensive and
complicate what the company wants to be a seamless experience, from
start to finish.
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Scout Motors shows off one of its older gasoline powered models at a
ceremony to celebrate the start of construction of its new electric
SUV, Feb. 15, 2024, in Blythewood, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins,
File)
 Gov. Henry McMaster touts the Scout
plant in Blythewood as one of his biggest economic development
scores The Republican has been to both the February 2024
groundbreaking of the massive facility and this month's ceremony to
mark work starting on a new $150 million interstate interchange the
state is paying for to help get workers, parts and new SUVs in and
out.
McMaster recently said he wants to protect dealers, but wants to let
Scout sell directly, too.
“Over the last few years with the Internet and Amazon and all the
others customers are looking for their freedom and that ability to
order things direct without a middleman,” McMaster said.
Scout is trying to find a niche in a growing but uncertain U.S.
electric vehicle market. President Donald Trump's election could
threaten the industry, both through ending tax credits and tariffs
that could raise prices.
The original Scout Motors made gasoline-powered vehicles for about
20 years when it was owned by International Harvester. Production
ended in 1980, but their shape and features continue to influence
modern SUVs. Scouts have had a niche fanbase of collectors ever
since.
The new Scout Motors is trying to tap into a mix of nostalgia and
technology. Key to Scout’s success will be its app, Scout Vice
President of Growth Cody Thacker said.
He envisions a Scout buyer scrolling through types and colors,
performance and comfort options and hundreds of other choices.
Financing, titling and paperwork would all be handled in minutes
instead of the hours it takes at dealerships. That custom SUV could
then be delivered to the buyer's door.
“You see the point of contention and the huge opportunity,” Thacker
said.
Scout's plant in Blythewood, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) north of
Columbia, is expected to open in 2027 and employ up to 4,000 people
if the company can hit its goal of making and selling 200,000
vehicles per year.
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Scout also wants to build by its plant a center where people could
test drive vehicles on a company-owned track and take tours. For it
to work, the company wants to be able to sell someone a vehicle
after they zoom around the site, Thacker said.
South Carolina agreed in 2023 to give Scout more than $1 billion in
incentives to land the plant. At the time, the dealership law wasn't
on their radar. It came up as executives started looking at their
business model, Thacker said.
The company doesn't regret choosing South Carolina and still
believes it gave them the best workforce, economic climate and
infrastructure. And it will move forward if the law isn't changed
selling its vehicles through other states where it can get national
licenses sending the money and tax benefits out of the state,
Thacker said.
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