kWhPrice

Home Charging vs Tesla Supercharger

Verdict

Home Charging is cheaper at 17¢/kWh vs 36¢/kWh for Tesla Supercharger. For a 60 kWh battery, Home Charging saves you $9.12 per full charge. Over 200 charges per year, that is $1,824.00 annually.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureHome ChargingWinnerTesla Supercharger
TypeLevel 2DC Fast Charge
Standard Rate17¢/kWh36¢/kWh
Member RateNoneNone
Membership Fee
Stations050,000
ConnectorsJ1772, NACSNACS

Cost by Battery Size

For an 80% charge (the typical fast-charge session).

BatteryHome ChargingTesla SuperchargerDifference
40 kWh$5.44$11.52Home pays -$6.08
60 kWh$8.16$17.28Home pays -$9.12
75 kWh$10.20$21.60Home pays -$11.40
100 kWh$13.60$28.80Home pays -$15.20
123 kWh$16.73$35.42Home pays -$18.70

Why Choose Home Charging

  • Cheapest option for most drivers ($0.11–$0.40/kWh depending on state)
  • Charge overnight while you sleep
  • No trips to charging stations
  • Time-of-use rates can cut costs further

Why Choose Tesla Supercharger

  • Largest network in North America with ~50,000 stalls
  • Consistently reliable uptime (>99%)
  • Integrated navigation in Tesla vehicles
  • Fast 250 kW peak speeds at V3 stations, 325 kW at V4

Which One Actually Fits Your Driving?

Rate alone doesn't decide the winner. Home Charging's 17¢/kWh is cheaper than Tesla Supercharger's 36¢/kWh, but the better network is the one whose stations are where you actually drive. Home Charging operates 0 stations; Tesla Supercharger operates 50,000. Check PlugShare or A Better Routeplanner for your specific corridors before subscribing — a cheaper rate at a network with a station five miles off your route is more expensive than a more costly network at the exit you're already taking.

Membership economics are the other hidden variable. Home Charging has no paid membership — the rate you see is the rate you pay. Tesla Supercharger also has no membership plan, so pricing comparisons stay simple.

Connector compatibility is the other decision gate. Home Charging supports J1772, NACS, while Tesla Supercharger supports NACS. If your EV is a 2025+ Tesla, NACS is native. If you drive a pre-2024 Ford, GM, Hyundai, or Kia, CCS is your primary plug — most OEMs are now shipping free NACS adapters to owners. Check your car's connector and which networks support it natively before choosing a home network.

At 15,000 miles per year on a mid-size EV (roughly 50 sessions at a 75 kWh battery), the annual cost difference between Home Charging ($510.00) and Tesla Supercharger ($1,080.00) is $570.00. That's the financial argument. The practical argument still comes down to location coverage and reliability — which varies more by region than any published rate card shows. For a full picture, see our home vs public analysis and the full network comparison.

Data sources: Published network rate cards from Home Charging and Tesla Supercharger; station counts from network and PlugShare data; manufacturer battery specs. Prices vary by location and time; verify in-app before charging.