November brought two significant charging milestones for Tesla in Europe. The company expanded its MultiPass feature to six countries, making third-party charging as simple as tapping a key card. Meanwhile, Tesla's global Supercharger network hit 75,000 connectors — with Europe accounting for a growing share.
MultiPass Rolls Out Across Europe
Tesla's MultiPass feature, which launched in the Netherlands in September, expanded on November 6 to Germany, France, Sweden, the UK, and Belgium. The feature turns a Tesla key card into a universal charging credential, allowing owners to charge at third-party stations without separate apps, cards, or registrations.
The process is straightforward: activate MultiPass through a notification in the Tesla app, then tap your key card on any supported charger or start a session remotely via the app. Charging costs appear alongside Supercharger sessions in the app's billing history, using the same payment method.
By partnering with a network aggregator, Tesla connects to over 1,000 charging networks and thousands of stations across Europe, including major operators like Fastned and Allego. For owners who travel across borders, the unified billing eliminates the need for multiple charging accounts.
75,000 Superchargers Worldwide
On November 20, Tesla announced reaching 75,000 Supercharger connectors globally. The milestone station, located in Tasmania, Australia, features a distinctive glacier-blue colour.
The pace of expansion has accelerated notably. Tesla added the last 5,000 connectors in roughly 4.5 months, compared to 15 months for the previous 10,000. In Europe, the network stands at over 14,000 chargers across 1,100 locations in 30 countries. Germany alone has more than 3,600 connectors at over 200 sites.
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Global Superchargers | 75,000 |
| European locations | 1,100+ |
| European chargers | 14,000+ |
| Countries in Europe | 30 |
| Germany chargers | 3,600+ |
| Open to non-Tesla | 99% (Europe) |
Notably, over 99% of Tesla's European Supercharger network is now accessible to non-Tesla vehicles — a significant shift from the brand's previously closed ecosystem.
Practical Impact
Together, MultiPass and the expanding Supercharger network address one of the most common pain points for European EV owners: the fragmented charging landscape. Whether you are on a Tesla Supercharger or a third-party Fastned station, the experience is increasingly unified under a single account and payment method.