Tesla has adjusted prices at its Supercharger stations across Canada, with some provinces seeing increases across the board, others seeing decreases, and many seeing a mix of both.
Tesla unfortunately does not publish their Supercharger prices for the general public to see, only including pricing for Tesla owners in the mobile app or in the vehicle. (Ironically, non-Tesla EV owners can see their pricing on Tesla’s Find Us map.)
Without an easy way to track pricing, we’re left to rely on our own knowledge of local Supercharger pricing and from previous charging sessions.
On Friday we noticed that the new Kananaskis Supercharger in Alberta had dropped by 37%, going from $0.67/kWh on its opening day, down to $0.42/kWh today. We shared the news on X, which triggered a flurry of responses from Tesla owners across the country who had noticed price changes in their areas too.
Unfortunately for Alberta, the Kananaskis price change was the only decrease in the province, with $0.04/kWh price increases across the board at other stations, going from $0.67/kWh to $0.71/kWh. For Non-Tesla EV owners in Alberta, they also saw an increase, now at $0.92/kWh from $0.90/kWh.
In Nova Scotia, the New Minas and Enfield Superchargers increased to $0.71/kWh, up from the previous $0.68/kWh.
Ontario saw lower prices, with many stations now having peak rates of $0.52-0.58/kWh, down from as high as $0.67/kWh previously, and non-peak rates of $0.40-$0.45/kWh.
Prices in Saskatchewan also dropped, down $0.09/kWh to $0.58/kWh at the Regina Supercharger.
Quebec is another province that now has lower Supercharger prices, with most stations dropping to $0.42/kWh. Manitoba Superchargers are also cheaper, now at $0.51/kWh.
The cheapest province for Supercharging remains British Columbia. Based on what our readers are telling us, some prices went down further in the lower mainland and in the interior of the province.
If you have noticed a change in Supercharger pricing in your area, let us know in the comments below.