A new study by JD Power shows that Tesla still dominates the electric vehicle charging experience, and it’s not even close.
Tesla’s early approach to the charging experience was built as a service to EV owners rather than a way to make money off of them.
This enabled Tesla to focus on making the experience seamless and it worked out.
Tesla developed the only global DC fast-charging network: the Supercharger network, which enables long-distance travel.
The automaker also developed the Destination network, which as the name suggests, provides charging once you arrived at your destination.
Both networks have been recognized as the gold standard of EV charging.
Now, a new study from JD Power confirms it, as both of Tesla’s charging networks sit at the top of the rankings for the best level 2 and level 3 charging networks:
Top comment by HendersonTRKing
If there's one thing that is keeping me in my 2020 Model S Performance in the face of Elon's increasingly unhinged behavior, it's the Supercharger Network. I bought in when he was running the "free supercharging for life" promotion at the end of 2019 -- an absolutely incredible incentive that, unfortunately, I've come to learn is non-transferrable (at least for me).
Between the reliability of the network, the fact that it's free and I can't transfer the benefit, I'm still in a vehicle that I love despite the fact that the company is run by a person I have come to abhor. Just today I was online shopping various alternatives and even before you consider charging issues, they all come up short: the Audi e-trons have great performance and build quality, but are range limited; the Caddy Lyric looks gorgeous, but the range isn't really there and the tech definitely isn't state of the art; the Lucids and Rivians are off the charts expensive, as are the Porsches. And then there's the charging. Tesla has made it so convenient, it's just too much of a PITA to make the switch. So Elon wins. For now. Even with the moronic, perpetually-in-beta wipers that have to be the single worst feature in an otherwise technologically superior vehicle.
Rant over. Carry on.
When it comes to level 3, Tesla lifts the entire average with the second-best network, Chargepoint, sitting more than 100 points behind.
JD Power explains Tesla’s lead in its study, which uses data from PlugShare:
Tesla owners remain satisfied with the Tesla Supercharger network, as evidenced by a score of 743, down just 2 points from 2023. Non-Tesla owners are not quite as satisfied when using a Tesla Supercharger (706), but that score is 42 points higher than the overall satisfaction with DC fast chargers. The biggest gaps between the satisfaction of Tesla and non-Tesla owners come in ease of payment and ease of charging. Tesla offers its owners a virtually automatic plug-and-pay ability not yet available to non-Tesla owners. Its Supercharger network is compatible with Tesla connectors, while current non-Tesla vehicles require the use of an adapter as part of the charging process.
However, as noted, the score is down year-over-year.
Earlier this year, Tesla CEO Elon Musk decided to fire Tesla’s entire charging team, which was responsible for building this consensus best charging network in the world.
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