Electric Adventure Awaits!
Stellantis Joins Forces with Tesla: Supercharger Network Now Open to EV Owners!
In a groundbreaking move, Stellantis has teamed up with Tesla to open its expansive Supercharger network to Stellantis electric vehicle (EV) owners across North America, starting March 2026, with expansions planned for Japan and South Korea in 2027. This partnership will provide access to over 27,500 Tesla Supercharger locations, reducing range anxiety and promoting EV adoption. Initial access will require a Free2move Charge NACS‑CCS1 adapter, but the 2027 Dodge Charger Daytona will feature a native NACS port. This expansion comes amid industry‑wide efforts toward EV charging standardization and accessibility.
Introduction to Stellantis and Tesla Partnership
Details of the Tesla Charging Network Access
Current Access Requirements for Stellantis EVs
Eligible Stellantis Vehicle Models
Role of Free2move Charge App Integration
Comparison with Other Automakers
Impact on EV Range Anxiety
Public Reactions to the Partnership
Future Implications for the EV Industry
Conclusion: The Road Ahead
Related News
Apr 17, 2026
Elon Musk's Terafab Project: Tesla, SpaceX Aim for In-House AI Chip Production
Elon Musk's team is taking early steps to create a semiconductor fab on the Tesla Austin campus, dubbed 'Terafab'. They're talking to Applied Materials, Tokyo Electron, and others for quotes on essential equipment. Intel might join too, strengthening Tesla and SpaceX's push into chipmaking for AI, robotics, and data centers.
Apr 17, 2026
Tesla's Robotaxi Expansion: Implications for Builders and Investors
Tesla's robotaxi service, now in Austin and San Francisco, promises a shift in autonomous driving. Investors are eyeing new earnings reports and potential expansion. How this impacts builders in AI and automotive industries could be huge.
Apr 15, 2026
Tesla Tapes Out Next-Gen AI5 Chip: A Leap Towards Autonomous Driving Prowess
Tesla has reached a new milestone in AI chip development with the tape-out of its next-generation AI5 chip, promising significant advancements in autonomous vehicle performance. The AI5 chip, also known as Dojo 2, aims to outperform competitors with 2.5x the inference performance per watt compared to NVIDIA's B200 GPU. Expected to be deployed in Tesla vehicles by late 2025, this innovation reduces Tesla's dependency on NVIDIA, enhancing its capability to scale autonomous driving and enter the robotaxi market.