π Read more: EV Highway Charging in Greece: Complete Map Guide
Where Are Tesla Superchargers in Greece?
According to Tesla's map, Greece has Supercharger stations at strategic points along major routes: Athens (multiple stations), Thessaloniki, Lamia, Larissa, Patras, Corinth, Tripoli, Kalamata, and islands (Crete). The count is growing steadily, with new stations opening every quarter.
Tesla uses a hub-and-spoke model: large stations (8-16 stalls) at key junctions and smaller ones (4-8 stalls) in between. Each station is located near restaurants, hotels, or shopping centres so you can make the most of the 20-30 minute charge.
Tested Routes with Supercharger Stops
- Athens β Thessaloniki: ~500km β 1-2 Supercharger stops (Lamia, Larissa)
- Athens β Patras: ~215km β 1 stop (Corinth)
- Athens β Kalamata: ~240km β 1 stop (Tripoli)
- Thessaloniki β Alexandroupoli: ~340km β new stations pending
Supercharger Generations: V2, V3, V4 β What's Changed?
Tesla runs three generations of chargers worldwide. In Greece, most stations use V3 (250kW) or V4 stalls with V3 cabinets (325kW). The brand-new full V4 with V4 cabinets (500kW) launched in September 2025 in the US and is expected in Europe during 2026.
According to electrek.co (September 2025), the first full V4 station was activated in Redwood City, California. A Tesla Cybertruck charged from 0% to 80% in 35 minutes at 500kW. In Europe, V4 stations will arrive gradually β Greece is likely to see its first during 2026.
π Read more: Ionity vs Tesla Supercharger 2026: Which Network Wins?
Open to All: Non-Tesla Access in Europe
Since 2023, Tesla has been gradually opening its network to non-Tesla vehicles in Europe. In Greece, any EV with a CCS plug can charge at a Supercharger via the Tesla app on your phone. No adapter is needed in Europe (unlike the US where a NACS adapter is required).
This change has dramatically increased the network's usefulness. According to electrek.co, in 2025 VW, Hyundai, Kia, Mercedes, Honda and many other brands gained official Supercharger access β sharply increasing demand.
How Much Does It Cost?
Tesla Supercharger pricing in Greece is per kWh and depends on whether you're a Tesla owner or using a non-Tesla EV:
Prices may vary by station. Always check the Tesla app before charging. For comparison: home charging in Greece costs approximately β¬0.15-0.20/kWh (off-peak DEI tariff), while a petrol car averaging 7lt/100km costs ~β¬12/100km in fuel β nearly three times more expensive.
"Superchargers are the only part of Tesla's business seeing growth right now" β a sign that Tesla is betting heavily on the charging network as a driver of the entire EV ecosystem.
β electrek.co, July 2025π Read more: EV Sales in Greece 2026: Numbers & Trends
How to Use a Supercharger (Step-by-Step)
The process is simple β even if you don't own a Tesla:
For Tesla Owners
1. Navigate to the Supercharger via in-car navigation. 2. Plug in β charging starts automatically. 3. Payment is charged to your Tesla account. The car pre-conditions the battery as you approach.
For Non-Tesla EVs
1. Download the Tesla app and create an account. 2. Add a payment method (card). 3. At the station, open the app and tap βStart Chargingβ. 4. Plug in the CCS connector. 5. Charging begins automatically.
What the Future Holds: Supercharger for Business
In January 2026, Tesla launched the Supercharger for Business programme, allowing third-party businesses to purchase and deploy their own Superchargers under their own branding. The first company to participate was US chain Wawa (January 2026), followed by Francis Energy.
This means hotels, shopping centres, and petrol stations in Greece could eventually install Tesla Superchargers, dramatically increasing coverage without Tesla needing to fund every station.
Tips for Charging at a Supercharger in Greece
- Charge to 80%: Beyond 80%, charging speed drops significantly β it's not worth the wait
- Peak vs off-peak: Some stations charge less at night or during low-demand periods
- Pre-conditioning: If you drive a Tesla, navigate via the in-car system for automatic battery pre-conditioning
- Idle fees: Leave as soon as charging is done β idle fees of ~β¬1/min add up quickly
Overall, the Tesla Supercharger network in Greece is evolving at an impressive pace. With 500+ V4 stalls compatible with all EVs coming to Europe by 2027, long-distance charging is becoming increasingly straightforward. For non-Tesla EV owners, the ability to use Superchargers has already been a game-changer: more stations, more reliable infrastructure, and competitive pricing. Together with IONITY, Protergia, and Blink stations, Greece is finally building a truly dependable fast-charging network that makes long road trips entirely feasible for EV drivers without range anxiety. The target is clear: no point in Greece should be more than 100 km from a fast charger by 2028.
