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Wireless CarPlay for Tesla

The 3 Ways to Get CarPlay in a Tesla, Compared

If you want Apple CarPlay or Android Auto in a Tesla, you have exactly three real options. One is clean, one is cheap, and one is expensive. Here is the honest side-by-side, so you can skip the drawer full of returns I went through.

By the TeslaHubs Editorial Team· Updated July 2026· 6 min read

Tesla builds its own navigation and, unlike almost every other carmaker, has never shipped Apple CarPlay or Android Auto. So the fifteen-inch screen in the middle of your car will not run Waze, your own music library, or your messages out of the box. Owners have found three ways around that gap. This guide walks through all three on the things that actually matter: cost, how it installs, how it looks in the cabin, and whether it holds a connection when you need it.

We sell one of these three, and we will tell you plainly which one and why. But the comparison below is honest about the tradeoffs, because a buyer's guide that pretends the other options do not exist is not worth reading.

Option 1: A plug-in wireless adapter

1

The plug-in adapter (what most owners land on)

A small box that plugs into your Tesla's USB port and adds full wireless CarPlay and Android Auto to the built-in screen. You set it in the glovebox out of sight, connect your phone over WiFi once, and it reconnects on its own after that. No wiring, no drilling, no software changes. The SpaceBox is this category, at $139.99 once with no subscription.

The appeal is that it is non-invasive and reversible. It uses a port you already have, hides completely, and unplugs in ten seconds to leave the car fully stock. Install runs about five minutes. The tradeoff is honest: on a cold morning or after a long full power-down, the first reconnect of the day can take a few extra seconds. In daily use it is simply there, already loaded, before you pull out.

Best for most owners

Option 2: A cheap marketplace dongle

2

The $40 to $55 dongle

The bargain listings look like the same idea for a third of the price. Sometimes they work fine for a while. The common owner complaint, and the reason many people end up buying twice, is reliability. Cheap single-band units can lag, run hot in the sun, and drop the connection at highway speed, which is exactly the moment you needed the next turn. If you buy off a third-party marketplace, support can also be thin when something goes wrong.

It is the cheapest way in, and for some owners it is genuinely enough. But a lot of people describe the same arc: buy the cheap one, return it, try the next, and burn a hundred dollars proving the point before buying the one that stays connected.

Cheapest, least reliable

Option 3: An aftermarket screen swap

3

Replacing the head unit or adding a screen

At the far end, some owners pay a shop to install an aftermarket head unit or a second dedicated screen that runs CarPlay natively. It works, and it can look polished when done well. But it is the most expensive path by a wide margin, it usually means a professional install, and it is invasive: you are changing hardware in the car rather than plugging into a port. That makes it harder to reverse and a bigger commitment if you plan to sell.

Most expensive, most invasive

There is also a fourth thing people try that is not really a fix: Tesla's own Premium Connectivity subscription at $9.99 a month. It is worth naming because owners reach for it first. It still will not put Waze or your own music on the screen, and it costs $120 a year, every year, for as long as you own the car.

Side by side

Plug-in adapter (SpaceBox) Cheap dongle Screen swap
Cost $139.99 once, no subscription $40 to $55, often bought twice Several hundred, plus install labor
Install Plug into USB port. About 5 minutes. Plug in, but fiddly re-pairing Professional install, hours
Cabin look Hidden in glovebox, cabin stays stock Hidden, but you may swap units often Adds or changes hardware
Reliability Reconnects on its own each drive Can lag and drop at highway speed Reliable, but a bigger commitment
Reversible Unplug in 10 seconds, car fully stock Yes, if it still works Hard to undo
Fits your Tesla Model Y, 3, S, X, Cybertruck Varies by listing Depends on the kit and shop
The cheap route and the expensive route both have a way of costing more than the middle one in the end.
A Tesla center screen running wireless CarPlay after installing a plug-in adapter
The plug-in adapter route: full CarPlay on the built-in screen, nothing added to the cabin.
See if SpaceBox fits your Tesla →

$139.99 once · 30-day money-back guarantee · rated 4.8 of 5 across 244 reviews.

Which one should you pick?

If money is the only thing that matters and you are willing to gamble on reliability, the cheap dongle is the entry point, with the caveat that a lot of owners end up replacing it. If you want a permanent, built-in look and do not mind paying for a shop, a screen swap is the premium route. For most owners, though, the plug-in adapter is the sweet spot: it is a fraction of the screen-swap cost, far more reliable than the cheap dongles, hidden in the glovebox, and reversible in seconds. That is why it is the option we chose to make, and the one most people land on.

What SpaceBox owners say

Real reviews from the product page, in their own words.

H
Hartman
★★★★★
This is the best solution I have ever seen.
L
Larry Hockman
★★★★★
Screen mirroring is a great feature. Thanks, everything works great.
M
Mark
★★★★★
Now my car looks complete.
SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter for Tesla

SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter

$139.99$299Save $159
One payment. No subscription, ever.
Add Wireless CarPlay →
30-day money-back guarantee and a 2-year warranty. Free US shipping and returns. Fits Model Y, 3, S, X and Cybertruck.

Common questions

Is a plug-in adapter safe for my Tesla?
The plug-in route uses the same USB port you charge a phone with. There is no wiring, no drilling, and no software change, and it unplugs in seconds to leave the car completely stock. It is fully reversible. As with any accessory, check your own warranty terms if you have questions.
Why not just buy the cheapest dongle?
Some owners do and are happy. The frequent complaint with the cheapest units is dropped connections at highway speed and short lifespans, which is why many people end up buying a second one. If reliability matters to you, it is usually worth skipping straight to the one that stays connected.
Will the adapter fit my exact model?
SpaceBox works with Model Y, Model 3, Model S, Model X and Cybertruck, including the Highland and Juniper refreshes.
What if it does not work for me?
SpaceBox is backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee and a 2-year warranty. If it does not work with your Tesla, or you are not satisfied, return it for a full refund.
Get the plug-in adapter for $139.99 →

One payment · about 5 minutes to install · reversible in 10 seconds.

TeslaHubs is an independent company, not affiliated with, endorsed, or sponsored by Tesla, Inc. Tesla, Model S, Model 3, Model X, Model Y and Cybertruck are trademarks of Tesla, Inc. Apple CarPlay is a trademark of Apple Inc. Android Auto is a trademark of Google LLC. Competing product categories are described for comparison only; the pricing shown for cheap dongles and screen swaps is a general market range and varies by seller. Customer reviews quoted are real submissions from the product page and reflect individual experiences; results and install times vary. Tesla Premium Connectivity pricing of $9.99 per month is referenced for comparison and is set by Tesla, Inc.
SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter
SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay
$139.99 once · 30-day guarantee
Add CarPlay