Stellantis Becomes the Final Major Automaker to Unlock Tesla's Charging Network

Stellantis Becomes the Final Major Automaker to Unlock Tesla's Charging Network

2026-03-21 companies

Auburn Hills, Saturday, 21 March 2026.
Cementing an industry milestone, Stellantis is the final major automaker to grant its EV drivers access to over 27,500 Tesla Superchargers across North America as of March 2026.

A Crucial Lifeline Amidst Strategic Shifts

As of March 18, 2026, Stellantis officially integrated its battery-electric vehicles (BEVs) into Tesla’s Supercharger ecosystem [1][7]. This development grants drivers access to more than 27,500 fast-charging stalls across the United States and Canada, representing a substantial portion of Tesla’s estimated 36,000-plus North American chargers [6]. The timing is particularly critical for Stellantis (NYSE: STLA) [GPT]. The automaker recently reported over $22 billion in charges related to the scaling back of its electric vehicle ambitions during its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings report [2]. After a turbulent 18 months marked by canceled projects—including the Ram EV and various plug-in hybrids—securing reliable charging infrastructure offers a vital consumer confidence boost for the brand’s surviving electric models [3].

The list of compatible vehicles spans several model years across the Stellantis brand portfolio. Supported models include the Dodge Charger Daytona (2024–2026), Jeep Wagoneer S (2024–2025), the upcoming 2026 Jeep Recon, and the Ram ProMaster EV (2024–2026) [2][8]. European marques under the Stellantis umbrella are also included, with access granted to the Fiat 500e (2024–2026) and Maserati’s Folgore lineup, encompassing the GranTurismo, GranCabrio, and Grecale [2][8]. Notably, first-generation Fiat 500e models lack the necessary architecture and are excluded from this rollout [2].

The Road to Native NACS Integration

The current reliance on physical adapters is a temporary bridge toward a more streamlined future. Stellantis has confirmed that the 2027 Dodge Charger Daytona will be its first electric vehicle to roll off the assembly line featuring a native NACS charging port [2][5]. This hardware evolution will allow future owners to plug directly into Tesla Superchargers without supplementary equipment, although they may eventually require a CCS-to-NACS adapter to utilize older, non-NACS public charging infrastructure [2].

Sources


Electric vehicles Charging infrastructure