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Tesla is rolling out a major redesign of how charging data is presented in its mobile app. The code supporting this update began deploying last week with version 4.58.0 of the Tesla mobile app, but the refreshed interface is only now becoming available.

The release is staggered, so only some owners have access at the moment. If it hasn’t appeared for you yet, it should show up once Tesla enables it server-side for your vehicle. When active, it adds new metrics, charging charts, and interactive rewards.

Charge Stats 2

The app’s Charge Stats module is receiving its largest visual update since launch. Previously, the Charge Stats screen showed a simple bar chart that split charging between home, work, and public locations. The new layout centers on an interactive map that pinpoints every Supercharger you’ve used within the selected timeframe. By default, the view covers the last 12 months, with an option to choose custom date ranges via the calendar control.

The panels below the map now surface additional useful details. Beyond tracking total charging spend and showing comparisons to local gasoline prices, the app also records the total range added across your charging sessions. You can continue to switch the main chart between Total Charged and Total Spent.

The category icons beneath the chart now display the exact total kilowatt-hours consumed for each charging type, along with the precise percentage that type was used over the chosen period.

Badges

Seasonal charging awards now live in a permanent Badges section in the app’s Charging area, located directly below Charge Stats. There you can view the badges you’ve earned by completing charging missions.

Badges are grouped into two categories: Milestones and Iconic Chargers. Milestones organize seasonal rewards by year. 2026 Milestones include Charging Streak (earned by using the Supercharger network four weeks in a row) and Explorer (awarded after visiting at least 10 unique Supercharger stations), along with historical items such as the Spring Festival badge and the Earth Day badge that owners earned by plugging in on April 22 this year.

The Iconic Chargers category recognizes trips to notable charging destinations. Visiting locations near the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, or Gigafactory Berlin unlocks a unique badge, as does stopping at places like the Tesla Diner in Hollywood.

2026 Free Supercharging Competition

Alongside these updates, Tesla has launched the 2026 Free Supercharging Competition to recognize heavy users of the Supercharger network.

"In January 2027, Tesla will celebrate nine outstanding Supercharger users from 2026 by awarding them free Supercharging for their Tesla vehicle for as long as they own it," said Tesla. "Winners are determined by their use of the Supercharger network throughout the 2026 calendar year. Three winners will be selected in each of three regions, for a total of nine winners worldwide."

The world will be split into three regions, with one lifetime free Supercharging prize per region in each of three performance categories:

  • Longest Trip: Given to the driver with the longest continuous streak of unique Supercharger visits in 2026, where each new site is visited within 24 hours of the previous session's start time.

  • Most Unique Supercharger Sites Visited: Granted to the owner who logs the highest number of unique Supercharger sites visited in the year.

  • Most Energy Supercharged: Awarded to the user who logs the highest total energy charged in kWh at Superchargers throughout the 2026 calendar year.

No special entry is required, but one step is essential: your final results are taken from your stats the last time you view your 2026 Charging Passport. To remain eligible, you must open the 2026 Passport screen in the app at least once before January 1, 2027. Tesla will email the nine global winners in January 2027, and lifetime free Supercharging will be applied to the winning vehicles before March 1, 2027.