Tesla Supercharger vs Blink Charging
Tesla Supercharger is cheaper at 36¢/kWh vs 44¢/kWh for Blink Charging. For a 60 kWh battery, Tesla Supercharger saves you $3.84 per full charge. Over 200 charges per year, that is $768.00 annually. Blink Charging offers a $4.99/month membership that can partially close the gap.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Tesla SuperchargerWinner | Blink Charging |
|---|---|---|
| Type | DC Fast Charge | Level 2 |
| Standard Rate | 36¢/kWh | 44¢/kWh |
| Member Rate | None | 29¢/kWh |
| Membership Fee | — | $4.99/mo |
| Stations | 50,000 | 4,500 |
| Connectors | NACS | CCS, J1772 |
Cost by Battery Size
For an 80% charge (the typical fast-charge session).
| Battery | Tesla Supercharger | Blink Charging | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 kWh | $11.52 | $14.08 | Tesla pays -$2.56 |
| 60 kWh | $17.28 | $21.12 | Tesla pays -$3.84 |
| 75 kWh | $21.60 | $26.40 | Tesla pays -$4.80 |
| 100 kWh | $28.80 | $35.20 | Tesla pays -$6.40 |
| 123 kWh | $35.42 | $43.30 | Tesla pays -$7.87 |
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
Why Choose Blink Charging
- ✓Available in many apartment and hotel settings
- ✓IQ 200 home charger integration for members
- ✓Membership discounts available
Which One Actually Fits Your Driving?
Rate alone doesn't decide the winner. Tesla Supercharger's 36¢/kWh is cheaper than Blink Charging's 44¢/kWh, but the better network is the one whose stations are where you actually drive. Tesla Supercharger operates 50,000 stations; Blink Charging operates 4,500. 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. Tesla Supercharger has no paid membership — the rate you see is the rate you pay. Blink Charging's $4.99/month tier cuts rates to 29¢/kWh, which breaks even at about 34 kWh/month (roughly one to two 80% top-ups for a mid-size EV).
Connector compatibility is the other decision gate. Tesla Supercharger supports NACS, while Blink Charging supports CCS, J1772. 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 Tesla Supercharger ($1,080.00) and Blink Charging ($1,320.00) is $240.00. 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 Tesla Supercharger and Blink Charging; station counts from network and PlugShare data; manufacturer battery specs. Prices vary by location and time; verify in-app before charging.