Tesla is known to run and operate the worldās most reliable charging network and has been rolling out more charging stations in many parts of the world with expansion of EV uptake.
Now, the company has installed its 75,000th supercharger, with the milestone charging stall being located in Australia.
The special Tesla āglacier blueā supercharger stall is located in Tasmania in Hobart, at the companyās second site in the state. This site has four bays with V4 superchargers capable of 250 kW per stall.
On this special supercharger, there is a plaque which states: āSupercharger No 75,000ā with the length of the supercharger program ā2012 – 2025ā.
Tesla started the supercharger program in the US in 2012. By 2017, it was operating 5,000 stalls globally before seeing a rapid surge in deployments int he following years.
During Q4 2024, Tesla rolled out its 60,000th supercharger stall, located in Enshu Morimachi, Japan.
Then, as of the end of Q2 in June 2025, Tesla reached a new milestone in installing its 70,000th supercharger stall globally. That was at a site in Burleson, Texas.Ā
Since then, the company has added another 4,000 stalls, 3,500 of which were in Q3, bringing the total to now 75,000.
As of November, there are over 7,900 open sites across the world, making up 75,000 fast charging stalls, according to data from supercharge info.
The company has also been evolving its supercharger tech and in Q3, it launched the upgraded V4 supercharger hardware with power density increasing by 3-folds.Ā
It also includes new tech supporting two times as many stalls per power cabinet when compared to the previous generation V3 hardware.
On the power density front, V4 cabinets have the potential to double the supercharging speeds to 500 kW, while supporting a range of high-voltage architectures. For trucks, this would be as high as 1.2 MW per stall as mass production of its Semi truck is expected to go online in 2026.
Tesla is continuing to roll out bigger and bigger sites, and locally in Australia, it still holds the title for opening and operating the biggest sites. As of November 2025, the largest fast-charging site in Australia is located in Goulburn, NSW and has 20 charging stalls.

With the number of EVs increasing by hundreds of thousands globally, more reliable fast chargers will be needed. In Australia, the supercharger network is a key part of reliable EV charging infrastructure and seeing the 75,000 stall right here in Australia is quite unique.Ā
We look forward to hearing from our readers who may charge at this milestone site in Tasmania.

RizĀ is the founder of carloop based in Melbourne, specialising in Australian EV data, insight reports and trends. He is a mechanical engineer who spent the first 7 years of his career building transport infrastructure before starting carloop. He has a passion for cars, particularly EVs and wants to help reduce transport emissions in Australia. He currently drives a red Tesla Model 3.
