New Tesla Superchargers Global Overview: May 8–14, 2023

Here’s a list of all the new Tesla Superchargers that went live across the globe this past week, courtesy of data from Supercharge.info and the TMC Forums:

Date Opened Location Number of Stalls Power Rating Official Listing
May 9, 2023 6590 Long Beach Boulevard, Long Beach, CA, USA 8 250 kW Tesla
May 9, 2023 The Wawa at 321 Buschs Frontage Rd, Annapolis, MD, USA 8 250 kW Tesla
May 10, 2023 Vester Fald 3, Nykøbing Mors, Nordjylland, Denmark 8 250 kW Unavailable
May 10, 2023 M4 Junction 2-3 Heston, Hounslow, UK 12 250 kW Unavailable
May 11, 2023 The San Gabriel Town Square at 140 W Valley Blvd, San Gabriel, CA, USA 20 250 kW Tesla
May 11, 2023 B1, Sheraton Hot Spring Resort Hotel, No. 5858 Taihu Road, Wuxing District, Huzhou City, Zhejiang, China 3 250 kW Unavailable
May 11, 2023 Xixi Legu Creative Industry Park, Hangzhou, China 3 250 kW Unavailable
May 12, 2023 3 Rue de la Mare Neuve, Évry-Courcouronnes, France 8 250 kW Unavailable
May 12, 2023 The Centro Comercial Jaén Plaza at 1 Paraje de las Lagunillas, Jaén, Spain 12 250 kW Tesla
May 12, 2023 95 Cheongpa-ro 20-gil, Yongsan-gu, Seoul, South Korea 12 250 kW Tesla
May 12, 2023 The Tesla Center at Jiangling East Road, No. 258, Pangbei Road, Wujiang District, Suzhou City, Jiangsu, China 3 250 kW Unavailable
May 12, 2023 No. 6, Lane 11, Section 6, Minquan E Rd, Neihu District, Taipei City, Taiwan 10 120 kW Tesla
May 12, 2023 The Moonraker Millhouse at 3501 Robin Lane, Cameron Park, CA, USA 12 250 kW Tesla
May 13, 2023 The Pioneer Market at 5034 Coakley Circle, Mariposa, CA, USA 12 250 kW Tesla
May 13, 2023 1661 Hilliard Rome Rd, Columbus, OH, USA 12 250 kW Unavailable

Tesla opened up a total of 15 new Superchargers between May 8 and 14, up slightly from 13 new locations the week before. As of last month, Tesla has more than 45,000 Supercharger outlets globally.

Over the past week, Tesla axed plans to produce right-hand drive versions of the Model S and Model X for several markets. In addition, the automaker is facing a class-action lawsuit in the U.S. over allegations that it reduced the driving range of its Model S and Model X vehicles by up to 20% and, in some cases, even caused total battery failure through automatic software updates.