📰 TODAY — 9h ago

📌 UPDATE — March 5, 2026

Tesla has opened a new Supercharger station in Quebec, QC on Boulevard de l'Auvergne, adding 12 stalls to its Canadian charging network. This brings the total number of new stations covered this week to 5, now spanning FL, France, Poland, and Quebec. The Quebec station was officially announced by @TeslaCharging on March 5, 2026.

Tweet by @TeslaCharging announcing Quebec Supercharger opening

📣 @TeslaCharging via X · March 5, 2026

📌 UPDATE — March 4, 2026

Tesla has officially opened a new Supercharger station in Wesley Chapel, FL, adding 12 stalls to the network. This brings Florida's total new openings this week to at least two, reinforcing the state's position as a key growth market for Tesla's charging infrastructure. The announcement was made directly by @TeslaCharging on X.

Tesla Charging tweet announcing Wesley Chapel FL Supercharger opening with 12 stalls

📣 @TeslaCharging · March 4, 2026 — 224 likes · 14 retweets · 3,619 views

📌 UPDATE — March 4, 2026

Tesla has officially opened a new Supercharger station in Starke, Florida, adding 8 stalls to the network. This brings the Florida expansion count higher than reported in our original article. The opening was confirmed directly by @TeslaCharging on X, making Starke a new charging hub for drivers traveling through north-central Florida along the I-10/US-301 corridor.

Tesla Charging tweet announcing Starke FL Supercharger opening

📣 @TeslaCharging · March 4, 2026 — 198 likes · 3,392 views

30-Second Brief

The News: Tesla's Supercharger network recorded 10 station changes in the week ending March 4, 2026 — 4 newly opened, 3 under construction, 1 in permit, and 2 in planning across North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific.

Why It Matters: Four new stations going live in a single week means more coverage on real routes Tesla owners drive today — while the construction and planning pipeline signals continued network growth in underserved corridors.

Source: supercharge.info/changes

This Week's Network Activity

Tesla's Supercharger footprint keeps expanding at a steady clip. This week's data from supercharge.info shows 10 station-level changes across three continents — a mix of doors-open additions and forward-looking pipeline activity that tells you where Tesla is building next.

🔌 Network Changes This Week

4
Open
3
Construction
1
Permit
2
Plan

Source: supercharge.info — Week ending March 4, 2026

📊 Key Figures

Metric Value Context
Total Changes 10 This week
Newly Open 4 FL ×2, France, Poland
Under Construction 3 OR, WA, CA
Permit Stage 1 France
Planning Stage 2 Singapore, Thailand
Regions Active 3 NA, Europe, Asia Pacific

Station-by-Station Breakdown

✅ Now Open (4 Stations)

Four stations flipped to OPEN status this week, immediately available in your Tesla's navigation:

  • Wesley Chapel, FL — Serves the Tampa Bay metro corridor, a high-traffic I-75 travel route.
  • Starke, FL — Fills a gap on the US-301 corridor between Jacksonville and Gainesville, useful for owners navigating central Florida without jumping onto I-95.
  • Caen, France – Bretteville — Adds coverage to Normandy in northwestern France, a region that previously had limited Supercharger density.
  • Koszalin, Poland — Extends Tesla's footprint along Poland's Baltic coast, supporting cross-country travel in northern Central Europe.

🔨 Under Construction (3 Stations)

These sites are actively being built. Expect them to go live within weeks to a few months:

  • Happy Valley, OR — A Portland suburb that will relieve pressure from existing stations in the metro area.
  • [Seattle City Light] Seattle, WA – SW Morgan St — A utility-partnered site in Seattle's West Seattle neighborhood. The Seattle City Light branding suggests a grid-integrated installation, which is notable for high-capacity deployments.
  • East Palo Alto, CA — Adds density to the already well-served San Francisco Bay Area, likely targeting commuter and urban charging demand.

📋 Permit Stage (1 Station)

  • Le Muy, France — Located in the Var department of Provence, this permit signals Tesla is targeting the heavily traveled A8 motorway corridor connecting Marseille to the Italian border. Permit approval typically precedes construction by 1–3 months.

🗺️ Planning Stage (2 Stations)

These are the earliest-stage entries — confirmed locations where Tesla has signaled intent but construction hasn't started:

  • Civic District, Singapore — A prime central location in one of Asia's most EV-forward cities. Singapore's dense urban core and government EV incentives make this a strategically important addition.
  • Pattaya, Thailand — Tesla's continued push into Southeast Asia. Pattaya is a major tourism destination, and a Supercharger here would serve both local owners and intercity travelers from Bangkok.

🔭 The BASENOR Take

Timeline Week ending March 4, 2026
Impact Level Medium — steady expansion, no single landmark opening
Confidence High — data sourced directly from supercharge.info

The geographic spread this week tells a clear story: Tesla isn't just filling gaps in mature markets — it's actively seeding new ones. The two planning-stage entries in Singapore and Thailand are the most forward-looking signals here. Southeast Asia has been a slower growth market for Tesla, but a planned station in central Singapore and a tourist-corridor site in Pattaya suggest the company is laying groundwork ahead of anticipated demand growth in the region.

On the North American side, the Pacific Northwest cluster is worth watching. Two stations simultaneously under construction in the Portland–Seattle corridor (Happy Valley, OR and Seattle's SW Morgan St) points to deliberate capacity planning for one of the US's most EV-dense regions. The Seattle City Light partnership on the Morgan St site is particularly interesting — utility-partnered Superchargers often come with higher stall counts and grid-level power agreements that support faster charging speeds.

For European owners, the Normandy opening in Caen and the Provence permit in Le Muy together suggest Tesla is methodically filling in the map between major French hubs. The Koszalin opening in Poland continues a pattern of Baltic coast expansion that has been building over the past several months. For owners planning charging news coverage, follow our charging news section for weekly network updates.

Bottom line: 10 changes in a week is a solid pace. The 4 openings are immediately useful; the 6 in-pipeline entries are a reliable indicator that the network's density — especially in the Pacific Northwest, southern France, and Southeast Asia — will look meaningfully different by mid-2026.

Charging

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