Tesla has surpassed 70,000 Supercharger stalls worldwide, marking a new milestone in the company’s continued push to scale electric vehicle (EV) infrastructure. The achievement coincided with the opening of a new 12-stall V3 Supercharger station in Burleson, Texas, according to the automaker.
The company reached the 70,000 mark just nine months after it celebrated its 60,000th stall installation in Japan in October 2024. Tesla’s pace of expansion has quickened significantly, with over 10,000 new stalls added since then—equivalent to nearly 30 new installations per day on average.
Tesla’s Supercharger network, launched in 2012 with just six U.S. locations, now spans 53 countries across North America, Europe, Asia, and South America. Estonia became the 53rd country to join the network, following the inauguration of its first Supercharger this week.
The network’s growth has been particularly steep since 2020. Tesla’s visual data shows fewer than 10,000 stalls globally in 2017, doubling to 20,000 by mid-2020 and reaching approximately 35,000 by late 2021. Since then, the company has deployed more than 47,000 stalls, bringing its global total to over 70,000 as of June 2025.
Regional expansion efforts have focused on Japan—where the 60,000th stall was installed—and South America, with Chile becoming the latest country to host Tesla Superchargers. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, the company deployed another 2,200 stalls, reinforcing its role as a global leader in high-speed EV charging.
