Tesla’s MultiPass Rolls Out to More Countries for Effortless Charging
Tesla owners in Europe just got another upgrade that takes convenience up a notch. The company has expanded its new MultiPass feature to more markets across Europe, allowing drivers to charge at compatible third-party stations directly through their Tesla account. No separate apps. No RFID cards. No extra logins. Just plug in and go.
After debuting earlier this year in the Netherlands, MultiPass is now live in Germany and France. The expansion marks another step in Tesla’s long-standing mission to make charging as effortless as owning one of its vehicles. It’s a move that speaks directly to Tesla’s bigger goal: creating a unified charging ecosystem that works anywhere, not just at Superchargers.
“Our goal is to make charging as seamless as possible, anywhere you go,” Tesla notes on its support page.
So what exactly does MultiPass do? Tesla describes it as a seamless charging option that connects drivers to more than 1,000 third-party charging networks and thousands of individual stations across Europe. Once activated, your Tesla essentially becomes your all-access pass to EV charging. Pull up to a supported charger, tap your Tesla key card, or select the stall directly in the Tesla app, and the cost of the session is automatically billed to your Tesla account. The same payment method used for Supercharging applies, and all your charging history from Superchargers to third-party stations appears in one place inside the app.
The result is a truly frictionless experience that mirrors the simplicity of Tesla’s Supercharger network. It eliminates the tedious process of downloading apps, scanning QR codes, or signing up for different payment systems. MultiPass turns your Tesla key card into a universal charging credential, bridging the gap between Tesla’s proprietary network and the wider EV ecosystem.
The timing also feels strategic. As Tesla continues to open its Supercharger network to non-Tesla drivers through the NACS standard, MultiPass shows that the company is thinking just as much about how its own drivers charge outside the Tesla ecosystem. The more compatible networks Tesla can bring under one umbrella, the easier it becomes for owners to take long road trips across Europe without worrying about app overload or inconsistent payment systems.
While it’s currently exclusive to Europe, the concept could eventually make its way to North America as the charging landscape consolidates. With most major automakers now adopting Tesla’s plug standard, a unified, plug-and-charge future seems closer than ever.
For now, European Tesla owners get the first taste of a more connected charging ecosystem, one where simplicity finally extends beyond Superchargers.
Source: Electrek



