Tesla Owner Report · Wireless CarPlay

I almost sold my Tesla over the one thing it still can't do. Then I found the 5-minute fix Tesla won't sell you, for $118 once instead of $120 a year forever

More and more Tesla owners are quietly adding full wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto to their cars with a small adapter that plugs into the USB port in about 5 minutes. No subscription. No tools. No wiring. And none of the ugly phone mounts, dropped Bluetooth, or $9.99-a-month ($120-a-year) rent Tesla keeps selling instead.

By the Teslahubs Editorial Desk · updated
A Tesla center screen running wireless CarPlay navigation and music
What your Tesla's screen looks like 5 minutes after SpaceBox arrives. No mount, no $9.99 subscription.

It was an ordinary Thursday when Mark, 41, sat in a parking garage in his Model Y and actually typed three words into his phone: "sell my Tesla."

He loved the car. That was the maddening part. The acceleration, the quiet, the way it drove. But he was late to a meeting across town, the built-in nav wanted to send him straight into a wall of red, and his phone, sitting useless in the cupholder, already had Waze open with a clean route around it. He just had no way to put it on the screen.

"I'm sitting in a $50,000 car, staring at a 15-inch display, and I can't see the one app that would actually get me there on time. Meanwhile my buddy's $28,000 Honda has had wireless CarPlay for years. How is that the upgrade?"

Mark isn't a complainer. He's a project manager, two kids, a 45-minute commute each way for the last six years. What he could never understand was why the most advanced car he'd ever owned felt, in that one specific way, like the most stubborn.

What makes his story worth telling isn't that he kept the car. It's what he figured out before he did, and the part almost no Tesla owner is told: this was never your phone's fault, and it was never yours.

20 months of ugly workarounds, and why none of it was your fault

Before he found the fix, Mark had already tried everything. And when an engineer's husband says everything, he means everything.

The magnetic vent mount first. It blocked the air vent, wobbled over every pothole, and in July his phone got so hot in the sun it threw a temperature warning and shut the screen off on the freeway. Then a $39 adapter from a marketplace listing with five-star reviews that turned out to be fake. It overheated, lagged a half-second behind every tap, and dropped the connection every time he drove under an overpass.

And the whole time, Tesla's answer was the same: pay $9.99 a month for Premium Connectivity. So he did. And he still didn't get Waze. He still didn't get his own Spotify playlists. He still didn't get his text messages on the screen. He was paying rent on his own dashboard and getting almost nothing for it.

Maybe you know that feeling. The slow realization that you didn't buy a car with a missing feature. You bought a car that was deliberately walled off, so you'd keep paying to stay inside the wall.

So here's the part that changed everything for Mark: the problem was never your phone, your cable, or your patience. The problem is that Tesla doesn't want you using Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, because every month you don't, you're a little more locked into their ecosystem.

The subscription worked, and charged a price no one mentions

Premium Connectivity does one thing well: it makes the stock map look live. And it costs $9.99 every month, which is $120 a year, every year, for as long as you own the car. Five years in, that's $600. And you still can't run Waze, you still can't see your own messages, and the day you sell the car, you've got nothing to show for it.

That was the math that stopped Mark cold. He wasn't angry about $9.99. He was angry that he'd been trained to think of a $9.99 toll as normal, when a one-time $118 fix would give him more than the subscription ever did, and keep working long after he'd have paid Tesla a small fortune.

The three traps Tesla owners fall into first (and why each one fails):

What if your Tesla could just do it itself?

Here's the thing Mark finally understood, the thing that turned "sell the car" into "wait, that's it?": your Tesla already has everything it needs. A gorgeous screen. A built-in browser. A USB port sitting right there in the console. The only thing missing is the bridge that connects your phone to that screen.

That bridge is a small device called SpaceBox. It plugs into the USB port, creates a private dual-band WiFi link to your phone, the same kind of link your home router uses, and your phone's CarPlay or Android Auto appears on the Tesla display. No mount. No subscription. No wiring. And it's reversible in ten seconds.

Stock Tesla screen with the basic built-in map onlySTOCK SCREEN The same Tesla screen running full wireless CarPlayWITH SPACEBOX

Why owners call it the upgrade Tesla should have shipped

How it works, in about 5 minutes

1
Plug SpaceBox into your Tesla's USB port.
2
Connect your phone to SpaceBox over WiFi (one time only, it auto-connects after that).
3
Open the CarPlay or Android Auto interface on your Tesla screen. That's it.
The real Teslahubs Space Box wireless CarPlay adapter
This is the actual Teslahubs Space Box. No tools, no wiring, no app. It plugs into your USB port and that is the whole install.
The honest version Average install time owners report: 5 minutes. The slowest we've ever heard was 8. There is nothing to drill, nothing to wire, and nothing that touches the car's software. Works on Model Y, 3, S, X and Cybertruck.

SpaceBox vs the three things you've probably already tried

The usual fixesSpaceBox
Your apps on the big screenMount: tiny phone screen. Subscription: still no Waze.Full Waze, Google Maps, Spotify and messages on the 15-inch display
Cost$120 a year, forever, for Premium Connectivity$118 one time. Nothing after that.
InstallMounts wobble; cheap adapters need fiddlingPlug into the USB port. About 5 minutes.
ReliabilityCheap adapters overheat, lag and drop on the highwayDual-band WiFi, auto-reconnects every drive
When you sell the carA subscription leaves you with nothingUnplug it in 10 seconds, car is fully stock
WarrantyHardwired kits can raise questionsNon-invasive and fully reversible. No warranty concerns.
Add Wireless CarPlay For $118 Once, Not $120 A Year →

What changes the first morning you drive with it

The morning Mark almost forgot he'd ever wanted to sell it

Three months later, Mark says the strangest part is how quickly it became invisible. He gets in, the screen wakes up with his music and his route already loaded, and he drives. The thing he nearly sold a car over is now the thing he doesn't think about at all.

"I tell every Tesla owner I meet. Five minutes, one plug, and the car finally feels finished. I just wish I'd done it the week I bought it instead of the week I almost got rid of it."

Finish My Tesla In 5 Minutes →

What other Tesla owners are saying

MT
Marcus T. ★★★★★
"I almost didn't buy this. $118 seemed too good to be true, and I'd been burned by cheap Tesla accessories before. First night I installed it in maybe 4 minutes. Next morning, CarPlay just appears. No cables, phone still in my pocket. I drove to work using Waze instead of Tesla nav and saved 10 minutes avoiding traffic. That was three months ago. I've told at least six friends. I'd already paid Tesla more in Premium Connectivity than this thing cost, and it does more. Wish I'd bought it the day I got my Tesla."
Marcus T. · Model Y owner · San Francisco, CA
JM
Jennifer M. ★★★★★
"I really love my Model 3, but the lack of CarPlay was always this annoying thing in the back of my mind. Phone mounts looked terrible. SpaceBox changed everything. Now I have Waze with speed traps, my actual Spotify playlists, and I can see texts without picking up my phone. It took longer to read the instructions than to do the install. If you're on the fence, just get it."
Jennifer M. · Model 3 owner · Austin, TX
KR
Kevin R. ★★★★★
"Wasn't sure it would work on my Cybertruck since it's so new. It does. Perfectly. CarPlay on that massive screen is incredible. Installation: 5 minutes. Problems: zero. Worth every penny."
Kevin R. · Cybertruck owner · Denver, CO
DS
Derek S. ★★★★★
"I'd been paying for Premium Connectivity for two years and never once thought about it. Did the math after installing SpaceBox and almost fell over. This thing does more than the subscription ever did and it's a one-time cost. Cancelled the subscription the same day."
Derek S. · Model Y owner · Chicago, IL
AP
Alicia P. ★★★★★
"Bought it for my husband's Model S and ended up using it more than he does. The auto-connect is the part that sold me. I get in, it's already there, and I never touch my phone while driving anymore. Should be standard in every Tesla."
Alicia P. · Model S owner · Seattle, WA

Questions Tesla owners ask before they buy

Will it work with my Tesla?
Yes. SpaceBox works with Model Y (2017 through 2026, including Juniper), Model 3 (2017 through 2026, including Highland), Model S, Model X, and Cybertruck (2024+). If you drive a Tesla, it works with it.
Is the install really that easy?
Yes. Plug SpaceBox into the USB port, connect your phone over WiFi once, and open the CarPlay interface on your screen. No tools, no drilling, no software changes. Average time owners report is 5 minutes.
Will it void my Tesla warranty?
No. It plugs into the same USB port you charge your phone with. There are no vehicle modifications and no wiring. If you ever need to remove it, for service or a trade-in, just unplug it. The car returns to completely stock condition in ten seconds.
Is $118 actually worth it?
Tesla Premium Connectivity is $9.99 a month, which is $120 a year, every year. SpaceBox is $118 one time, and it gives you Waze, Google Maps and your real music apps that Premium Connectivity doesn't. It pays for itself before the first year is out.
Is this a scam? Why doesn't Tesla just include it?
It's a fair question, and the answer is the reason you haven't heard of it. Tesla has no incentive to tell you a $118 adapter replaces its $120-a-year subscription, so it doesn't, and it leaves CarPlay out on purpose to keep you paying. SpaceBox simply uses the screen, browser and USB port your car already has. 232+ verified owners have reviewed it at an average of 4.88 out of 5 stars, and it's backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee, so the risk is on us, not you.
What if it doesn't work for me?
You're covered by a 30-day risk-free trial and a 2-year warranty. If it doesn't work with your Tesla, or you're not satisfied for any reason, return it for a full refund. Free returns included.

Get Wireless CarPlay On Your Tesla

30 DAY
30-day money-back guarantee plus a 2-year warranty. If it doesn't work with your Tesla, you don't pay for it.

SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter

Premium Connectivity is $120 a year, every year. Five years in that is $600, and the day you sell the car you have nothing. SpaceBox is $118 one time, and it does more.

SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter YOU SAVE $181 (60% OFF)
$299$118one time
60% off ends today: --:--:--
Get SpaceBox Now →

Free US shipping · Ships within 24 hours · 4.88/5 from 232+ reviews

Stock at this price is limited. The $9.99 subscription never goes on sale, and never ends.

Replace The $120/Year Toll For $118 Once →

10,000+ Tesla owners have already done it. The whole thing takes 5 minutes.

P.S.: Remember Mark, sitting in a parking garage typing "sell my Tesla" into his phone? The distance between that Thursday and the car he happily drives today wasn't a new car. It was a $118 adapter and five minutes. You can keep paying $120 a year for a screen that still won't run Waze, or you can finish your Tesla today and never think about it again.

Comments

428 comments
RW
Ryan W. Model Y
Does it actually stay connected on the highway? My last adapter dropped every time I hit a dead zone.
TH
Teslahubs verified
It's a direct dual-band WiFi link between SpaceBox and your phone, so cell dead zones don't affect it. Owners report it holds the connection the whole drive and auto-reconnects every time.
PG
Priya G. Model 3 Highland
Got mine last week. The auto-connect is unreal. I genuinely forget it's an add-on now. Should've done this a year ago.
MB
Marcus B. Cybertruck
Was nervous about the Cybertruck since it's new. Worked first try. CarPlay on that screen is something else.
LC
Lauren C. Model Y
Cancelled Premium Connectivity after I installed this. Why was I paying $10 a month and still not getting my own maps?
JD
James D. Model S
Same. The math is kind of insulting once you see it. One-time vs forever.
Teslahubs is an independent Tesla accessories retailer and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Tesla, Inc. or Apple 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. Customer stories reflect individual experiences; results and install times vary. Pricing for Tesla Premium Connectivity ($9.99/month) is referenced for comparison and is set by Tesla, Inc.
References: Tesla Premium Connectivity pricing, Tesla.com. SpaceBox owner reviews (232+ verified, 4.88/5 average). Compatibility: Model Y/3/S/X and Cybertruck.
SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter
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