Tesla has hit another massive charging milestone, announcing the installation of its 75,000 Supercharger post worldwide—a pace that continues to outstrip every other fast-charging provider by a wide margin.
The company marked the achievement by installing a Glacier Blue Supercharger in Tasmania with a plaque indicating its significance.
The milestone comes less than five months after Tesla crossed the 70,000-stall threshold. Tesla accompanied today’s announcement with a graphic showing exponential expansion dating back to 2017.


The pace of Tesla’s Supercharger network expansion is nothing short of remarkable. When the company celebrated 70,000 Supercharger stalls in late June 2025, it had just added 10,000 stalls in eight months. Prior milestones tell a similar story:
- 50,000 stalls reached in September 2023
- 60,000 stalls reached in October 2024
- 70,000 stalls reached in June 2025
- 75,000+ stalls in November 2025
That means Tesla has deployed more than 47,000 Superchargers in just five years, averaging well over 10,000 new stalls annually. In 2024 alone, the company installed more than 10,600 stalls—roughly 30 new charging posts every single day. And in Q1 2025, Tesla added another 2,200 stalls across the globe.
The Supercharger network’s footprint now stretches across North America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and most recently expanding to South America. Over the past year, Tesla has expanded into new markets including Chile (its first Supercharger in South America) and the Philippines. Estonia also joined the list recently, becoming the 53rd country to host a Supercharger location.
With Tesla adding roughly 10,000 to 12,000 stalls each year, the company is on track to surpass 80,000 global Supercharger posts by mid-2026.

