First Tesla V4 Supercharger Opens to Non-Tesla Electric Vehicles

Image: @TeslaCharging on Twitter

Tesla’s first V4 Supercharger stalls, located in Harderwijk, Netherlands, are now open to non-Tesla electric vehicles (EVs), as announced by the official @TeslaCharging account on Twitter.

This comes less than a month after Tesla officially opened the Supercharger station, its first with V4 stalls, saying at the time that it will “soon welcome all EVs at this site.”

Tesla’s V4 Superchargers feature a slimmer, sleeker design than the company’s open-centered V3 stalls. According to a recent report, they also have a longer charging cable that measures 290 cm (9.8 feet).

While Tesla’s V4 Superchargers currently top out at the same charging speeds as its V3 stalls, that is expected to change in the near future.

Tesla plans to open several new V4 Supercharger sites in Europe. The all-electric automaker’s first V4 Supercharger location was originally expected to be a station in Dateland, Arizona, but that site appears to still be in the works.

Tesla already offers CCS charging attachments in the Netherlands for its V2 and V3 Superchargers, allowing EVs from other brands to charge at these locations. In the U.S., Tesla recently started installing stalls with its “Magic Dock” attachments at existing Superchargers, officially opening select locations to non-Tesla EVs.