Tesla in Massachusetts 🦞
MOR-EV is one of the most generous state programs in the US. Combined with utility rebates, total state-level support can hit $9,000+.
MA at a glance
MOR-EV state rebate: $3,500-6,000 depending on income. Eversource and National Grid add $1,000-2,500 in charger rebates. Tesla service center in Dedham; mobile service covers most of state. Boston has the densest urban Tesla concentration in New England.
🏛️ State programs
MOR-EV (Massachusetts Offers Rebates for Electric Vehicles)
The flagship state EV rebate program, administered by MassCEC and DOER.
- $3,500 standard rebate for new BEVs with MSRP under $55,000
- +$1,500 income-qualified bonus for low-to-moderate income buyers
- +$1,000 trade-in bonus for retiring a high-emissions vehicle
- Total possible: $6,000 stacked
- Used EV rebate: $3,500 for income-qualified buyers (vehicle must be 2 years old, under $40k)
- Stack-able with federal §30D / §25E
Sales tax
Massachusetts does NOT exempt EVs. 6.25% sales tax applies. Tesla collects at delivery.
Registration + excise tax
Standard registration fees plus the annual motor vehicle excise tax (~$25/$1000 of value, first year). The excise tax is municipal and based on MSRP for the first 5 years. A $50k Tesla costs ~$1,250 in first-year excise.
⚡ Utility programs
Eversource
- ConnectedSolutions BYOD-EV: Up to $500/year for letting Eversource manage your charging during grid peaks
- EV TOU rate: off-peak (9 PM - 12 PM weekdays + all day weekends) significantly cheaper
- $2,500 Make-Ready rebate for residential Level 2 install
- $10,000+ MUD/workplace install rebates
National Grid (Massachusetts)
- ConnectedSolutions BYOD-EV: Similar to Eversource — managed charging credit
- EV TOU rate with off-peak pricing
- Make-Ready Program: Free electrical infrastructure for new charging stations at MUDs, workplaces, public
- $1,500 Level 2 home charger rebate
Municipal utilities
Belmont, Concord, Hingham, Holyoke, Marblehead, Reading, Wellesley, and many other MA towns have municipal electric utilities with their own programs. Check directly — rates and rebates vary considerably.
🛣️ Charging infrastructure
Supercharger coverage
- Boston metro: 20+ stations, dense coverage in Cambridge, Boston, suburbs
- I-90 (Mass Pike): excellent — stations every 30-50 miles to the NY border
- I-93/I-95: strong coverage
- Cape Cod: Hyannis, Wareham, plus locations on the Cape itself
- Berkshires: Lee, Lenox area
MassEVIP charger network
State-run program funded public Level 2 chargers at workplaces, MUDs, and public locations. Heavy presence at MA state office buildings, T stops, and many municipal lots.
Coverage gaps
- Western MA hilltowns (Hampshire/Franklin counties west of I-91) — sparse
- South Coast interior (south of New Bedford to RI border) — limited
- Outer Cape (Truro, Provincetown) — Provincetown has chargers, Truro/Wellfleet sparse
📜 MA-specific quirks
- Tesla service in Dedham is the main full-service location. Mobile service is widely available statewide.
- Boston street parking is heavily restricted; many neighborhoods don't allow overnight parking on streets, limiting options for renters without garages.
- Annual safety inspection required. EVs pass easily (no emissions to test).
- Boston's tunnels can interfere with FSD camera-based features for a few seconds when entering. Normal.
- Snow rules: MA Right to Charge in MUDs has limited scope — primarily for HOA condos. Check current statutes.
- Cape traffic in summer can leave you charging at full Supercharger stations during peak — plan around.