Tesla Ownership Tips
Habits that save money, extend the car's life, and avoid the most common new-owner mistakes.
Why this page exists
Tesla's delivery hand-off is famously brief. You drive home and immediately have questions nobody answered. This is the collected wisdom from owners who've put 50k+ miles on theirs — the stuff that turns out to actually matter.
🔋 Battery longevity
The 20-80% rule
For daily use, keep your battery between 20% and 80% state of charge. Lithium-ion batteries degrade faster near both extremes — at 100% from oxidation stress at the cathode, at 0% from copper dissolution at the anode.
- Set the daily charge limit at 80%. In the touchscreen: Charging → Set Limit. Drag to 80.
- Only charge to 100% for road trips. Set it the morning of, not the night before. Sitting at 100% is what causes degradation, not the act of charging to it.
- Don't sit at 0% for any length of time. The car prevents this in normal use but will warn you. If it hits 0%, plug it in soon — not in a week.
- LFP batteries are different. Standard Range Plus (some 2021+ Y/3) uses LFP chemistry. Tesla recommends charging LFP to 100% weekly to maintain BMS calibration.
Common misconception
"Charging slowly is better for the battery." False at home — AC charging at any speed (Level 1 or Level 2) is gentle. The thing that matters is state of charge over time, not charging speed. DC fast charging (Supercharging) is slightly harder on the battery, but you'd need to Supercharge as your primary method to see meaningful degradation.
Battery preconditioning
A cold battery (below ~50°F) can't accept fast charging without degradation. Tesla has battery preconditioning built in:
- Navigate to a Supercharger in the car. The battery starts warming as soon as you start driving toward it. Adds 5-10 minutes vs an unnannounced arrival.
- Use "Schedule Departure" for daily driving. Set your departure time and let the car precondition battery + cabin before you leave.
- Force preconditioning on demand: Controls → Battery → "Precondition Battery Now" (after 2024 software update).
⚡ Charging habits
Plug in every night, even if you don't need to
Vampire drain (battery loss while parked) is real. Sentry Mode, cabin overheat protection, and the always-on telematics use 1-3% per day. Plugging in maintains the SOC and lets the car run its housekeeping (BMS balancing, OTA downloads) without drawing the pack down.
The plug doesn't have to be Level 2. Even a 120V outlet at 3-5 mi/hr will keep up with vampire drain.
Schedule charging for off-peak hours
Most utilities have Time-of-Use rates where overnight electricity is 30-50% cheaper. In the car: Charging → Schedule → Set "Charge starts at" to your utility's off-peak start time (commonly 9 PM or 11 PM, runs until 7 AM).
See your state's utility programs for TOU rate specifics.
Sentry Mode etiquette
Sentry Mode uses significant power — leaving it on 24/7 in a parking lot can drain the battery 5-10% per day. Use it in shopping mall parking lots and unfamiliar areas, but consider disabling it in your driveway. There's a "Sentry Mode locations" feature that auto-disables it at marked safe places.
🛞 Tires — surprisingly expensive, easily ruined
The tire reality on a Tesla
Tesla tires are $250-400 each, and EVs eat tires faster than ICE cars (more torque, higher curb weight). Treat them like you'd treat the battery — they last longer with good habits.
Tire pressure
- Check monthly minimum. Tesla's TPMS will warn you if a tire is low, but TPMS only triggers below ~25% under-spec.
- Set to the door jamb sticker spec when cold (not after driving). Model Y LR: 42 PSI front, 42 PSI rear typically. Model 3: 42/42. Check yours.
- Slightly higher = better range, slightly lower = better ride. ±2 PSI within the cold spec.
- Cold weather drops pressure. A car set to 42 PSI in summer reads 36-38 PSI in winter. Reset in fall.
Tire rotation
- Every 6,250 miles (Tesla recommends every 6,250 or when 2/32" tread depth difference appears between front and rear).
- Cross-rotation pattern (front to rear opposite side) for non-directional tires.
- Save the receipts. Skipped rotations void Tesla's "premature wear" warranty.
Alignment matters more on EVs
EV instant torque means even slight misalignment chews up tires fast. Symptoms:
- Uneven wear (one shoulder more worn than the other)
- Steering pulls to one side on a flat road
- Steering wheel off-center when driving straight
Get an alignment check at the first sign of any of these. $80-150 for a 4-wheel alignment saves $1,200 in tires.
🧼 Cleaning & cosmetic care
The right wash routine
- Use touchless car washes only. Automatic brushes scratch Tesla's soft paint horribly. The "no-touch" laser/air-jet ones are fine.
- Avoid the rear window wiper-style washes. Tesla has no rear wiper on Y/3, so the salts and chemicals can collect on the rear glass.
- Hand wash with two-bucket method for best results.
- Use pH-neutral car shampoo. Dish soap strips wax/sealants.
- Dry with microfiber, not a chamois. Chamois drag grit across the paint.
Paint protection
Tesla's paint is famously soft (especially Pearl White Multi-Coat). Options:
- Ceramic coating ($800-2,000) — 2-5 year hydrophobic protection. Recommended for new cars.
- Paint Protection Film (PPF) ($1,500-4,500 for partial, $5k-8k for full) — physical barrier against chips. Best for front bumper, hood, fenders.
- Wax/sealant ($30-100) — DIY, 2-3 month durability. Cheap but maintenance-heavy.
Glass roof care
- Don't park under sap-dropping trees. Sap etches glass.
- Clean bird droppings immediately. Uric acid eats clear coat in hours.
- Glass roof gets HOT in summer. Cabin Overheat Protection helps but window tint is the better solution. 70% VLT ceramic tint on glass roof is popular.
💻 Software & the touchscreen
Software updates
- Don't auto-update during long drives. Set update preference to "Advanced" — only updates when you tap accept.
- Read release notes before installing. Tesla has occasionally released regressions that affected key features.
- Keep WiFi connected at home — cellular OTA updates are bandwidth-limited and unreliable.
- Wait a few days after a major release. Lets early adopters find showstopper bugs.
Reboot before complaining
90% of "the touchscreen is weird" issues resolve with a soft reboot:
- Put the car in Park
- Hold both scroll wheels on the steering wheel for ~10 seconds
- The screen will go black, then Tesla logo, then back to normal in ~30 seconds
- Car drives normally during reboot — only the screen reboots
Full power-off reboot (rare): Controls → Safety → Power Off. Wait 3+ minutes, then press brake to wake.
Voice commands you'll actually use
- "Open glove box"
- "Set temperature to 70"
- "Navigate home"
- "Call [contact name]"
- "Play [song] on Spotify"
- "Set fan to 4"
- "Open trunk"
- "Take a screenshot"
❄️ Winter ownership (especially in cold climates)
Pre-warming pays for itself
Schedule departure for winter mornings. The car warms cabin + battery from grid power while plugged in (free, basically) instead of from the battery on the road (expensive in lost range).
Winter tires
All-season tires harden below ~40°F and lose grip. Winter tires below freezing can be the difference between making it up your driveway and not. Recommended Tesla winter tires:
- Michelin X-Ice Snow — best ice grip, premium price
- Nokian Hakkapeliitta R5 — Finnish tire, legendary winter performance
- Bridgestone Blizzak WS90 — best value
- Continental VikingContact 7 — quiet, balanced
Door handle freeze (Model 3/Y)
- Use the Tesla app to unlock before approaching the car — door handles auto-present (Y) or you push in (3) and they release.
- If handles are frozen: warm them with your hand for 30 seconds. Don't yank.
- Tap the door briskly with a closed fist to break the ice seal around the door (this trick saves your hand on -10°F mornings).
Charge port freeze
- If the port won't open, hold the charge cable button for 5 seconds — it sends a heat pulse.
- Use the app to manually open the port: Charging → Open Charge Port.
🚗 Driving habits that save range
The big four (in order of impact)
- Speed. Going from 75mph to 65mph adds ~15-20% range. Wind resistance scales with the cube of speed.
- Temperature. Cabin heating in cold climates eats 20-30% range. Seat heaters (~80W each) are 50x more efficient than cabin heat (~4kW).
- Acceleration style. Smooth acceleration is more efficient than full-throttle launches. Regen recovers a lot, but air resistance loss is unrecoverable.
- Tire pressure. 5 PSI under spec costs ~3-4% range.
Things that don't matter much
- One-pedal vs creep driving. Equal efficiency at the same average speed.
- Music/audio. Negligible draw.
- Heated seats vs steering wheel. Both are tiny compared to cabin heat.
- AC use. Cabin cooling is 5-10% range hit, less than heating.
🛠️ Service & maintenance
What Tesla actually recommends
Tesla's maintenance schedule is short:
- Cabin air filter: every 2 years
- HEPA filter (if equipped): every 3 years
- Tire rotation: every 6,250 mi
- Brake fluid test: every 4 years (replace if contaminated)
- AC desiccant: every 4 years (Model S/X), every 6 years (Model 3/Y)
- Wiper blades: as needed
That's it. No oil changes. No transmission fluid. No spark plugs. No timing belt. No fuel filter. EV maintenance is genuinely minimal.
DIY-friendly items
- Cabin air filter — 10 minute job. Replacement filters $15-30 on Amazon. Tesla charges $75-100 + labor.
- Wiper blades — standard size, any auto parts store.
- Washer fluid — pop the frunk, fill the blue-cap reservoir.
- Tire rotation — if you have the tools and a jack.
Should-not-DIY items
- Brake fluid. Requires Tesla service tool to bleed properly with ABS.
- 12V battery replacement. Possible but risky — wrong polarity wakes the HV system. Have Tesla or an EV-savvy shop do it.
- Anything inside the HV battery pack. Lethal voltages. Tesla-only.
- Coolant system work. Specific Tesla coolant blend required.
💸 Things that cost more than you expect
Budget items first-time owners are often surprised by:
- Tires: $1,000-1,600 for a set of 4 every 25-35k miles
- Insurance: 20-40% higher than equivalent ICE due to parts cost. Tesla Insurance often beats third parties; comparison shop.
- Premium Connectivity: $10/mo — required for live traffic, satellite maps, streaming media, Sentry Mode video review. Free 1-year trial on new cars.
- Wheel/tire damage: 21" Performance wheels are $1,500-2,000 each replacement.
- Windshield repair: Tesla windshields are $1,500-2,200 installed.
- Body shop work: Tesla-certified shops are limited and expensive. A minor fender bender on a Model Y often runs $4-8k.
- Software upgrades: Acceleration Boost on RWD: $2,000. FSD: $8,000+.
⛔ The classic mistakes
- Charging on a regular extension cord. The Mobile Connector is specifically not rated for extension cords. House fires have happened.
- Leaving the car at low SOC for weeks. Vampire drain can take a 10% car to 0% in 5-7 days. 0% sitting damages the pack.
- Towing without a wheel dolly. Teslas have no neutral mode for flat-towing. Use a flatbed. Always.
- Driving through deep standing water. Battery pack is sealed but seals fail. Water intrusion totals the car.
- Frunk pinch. Doesn't have anti-pinch sensors. Don't put hands in.
- Glass roof aftermarket roof racks. Most aren't rated for the glass. Stress cracks the roof.
- Trusting the rear-view camera in fog. Vision-based parking still has limits.
- Skipping the 12V battery replacement. When it dies, the car is bricked — won't power on, frunk won't open, mobile app can't wake it. Replace at 4 years preemptively.