The 5-Minute Fix Tesla Owners Are Using to Get CarPlay Back
Tesla never shipped Apple CarPlay or Android Auto. A quiet workaround has been spreading through owner groups, and it plugs in behind the glovebox in about five minutes.
Ask a room full of Tesla owners what they would change about their car, and a surprising number name the same thing. Not range. Not price. The missing Apple CarPlay. It is the one gap almost every other new car closed years ago, and the one Tesla has quietly refused to fill. For a long time, owners had no clean answer. Lately, they have found one, and it is spreading by word of mouth faster than any official update.
The fix is not a software hack or a dealer visit. It is a small box that plugs into the car's own USB port and puts full wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto on the fifteen-inch screen the car already has. Owners set it in the glovebox, out of sight, and forget it is there. The whole install takes about five minutes.
The gap Tesla left open
Almost every carmaker treats Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard. Tesla built its own navigation and infotainment instead and never added either one. For owners, that means the phone lives in the cupholder with Waze open while the best screen in the car sits half-empty. Tesla's own paid answer, Premium Connectivity at $9.99 a month, still will not run Waze, your own music, or your messages on the screen. You pay $120 a year and the gap stays exactly where it was.
What the fix actually is
The device owners are reaching for is a plug-in wireless adapter. The one that keeps coming up in owner groups is the SpaceBox, made by TeslaHubs, an independent Tesla accessories company. It is worth being precise about what it does, because the appeal is in how little it changes.
How it works
- Plug it into the Tesla's USB port and set it in the glovebox, out of sight.
- Connect your phone over WiFi once. After that it reconnects on its own every drive.
- Open the CarPlay or Android Auto interface on the built-in screen. That is the whole setup.
There is no wiring, no drilling, and nothing that touches the car's software. Because it only uses the USB port, it is fully reversible: unplug it in ten seconds and the car is exactly as it was. That reversibility is a big part of why owners feel comfortable with it, especially anyone worried about keeping the cabin and the car stock.
$139.99 once, no subscription. Fits Model Y, 3, S, X and Cybertruck.
Why owners pick it over the alternatives
There have always been two other ways to add CarPlay to a Tesla, and owners have tried both. The cheapest is a $40 marketplace dongle, which often works for a while and then starts dropping the connection at highway speed, sending people back to buy a second one. The most expensive is an aftermarket screen swap, which means paying a shop to change hardware in the car. The plug-in adapter sits in the middle: far more reliable than the cheap dongles, a fraction of the cost of a screen swap, and reversible in seconds.
The cost math is what finally moves most owners. The subscription is $120 a year, every year, for a screen that still will not run Waze. The adapter is one payment of $139.99. By the second year, it has already cost less than renting a worse version of the same feature, and you own it outright.
What owners say after installing it
Real reviews from the product page, in their own words.
This is the best solution I have ever seen.
This is my second set, this time for my wife. Thank you, TeslaHub, for this wonderful set of CarPlay.
Now my car looks complete.
On the product page, the adapter is rated 4.8 out of 5 across 244 owner reviews.
SpaceBox Wireless CarPlay Adapter
Questions owners ask
$139.99 once · about 5 minutes to install · 30-day money-back guarantee.
