Tesla Just Hit 75,000 Superchargers Worldwide

Image: Tesla

Tesla has officially surpassed 75,000 Supercharger stalls worldwide, marking one of the company’s biggest charging-network milestones to date. The news was first shared by @teslacharging on X, which posted a celebratory image featuring a special, Glacier Blue edition Supercharger stall at a site in Tasmania, Australia.

Tesla’s commemorative 75,000th stall is located at a Supercharger station on 2 Howard Rd in Glenorchy, Tasmania, which is home to a total of four chargers. This comes after the EV giant installed its 70,000th Supercharger stall at the end of June.

The milestone also arrives just days after Tesla introduced live, dynamic Supercharger pricing at 550 sites across the U.S., expanding a pilot that began in May with only 10 locations. The new model adjusts prices in real time based on local energy costs and site demand, giving drivers better visibility — and potentially lower costs — as Tesla continues optimizing its charging ecosystem.

Image: Tesla

Tesla calls its Supercharger network the largest DC fast-charging infrastructure in the world, and the pace of expansion underscores just how far ahead it remains. In Q3 alone, the company added a record 4,000 new Supercharger stalls to its network, the biggest quarterly build-out Tesla has ever logged. Usage is scaling at a similar pace: Tesla also hit an all-time high average of 587,000 charging sessions per day during the quarter.

Supercharger visibility and accessibility have improved dramatically as well. Just last week, Google Maps began showing real-time Tesla Supercharger availability, giving both Tesla and non-Tesla EV owners more accurate insights into charger status before arriving. What’s more, Tesla also recently started advertising Superchargers on U.S. highway signs.

Meanwhile, Tesla is working on a virtual queuing feature, spotted earlier this year in a software update, which would allow drivers to reserve a spot in line digitally — a potentially huge improvement for busy stations.

The milestone also comes as more non-Tesla EVs gain access to the network. Most recently, Volkswagen became the latest automaker to join the NACS transition, with its EVs getting Supercharger access this week. As availability and visibility continue improving, adoption and usage of the network will only accelerate.

With 75,000 stalls now live globally, Tesla’s charging infrastructure is growing at a scale no other network has matched — and all signs indicate that pace is only speeding up.