Tesla has introduced the Charging Passport feature in its mobile app, offering owners a yearly summary of their 2025 charging history. The tool highlights trips, visited Superchargers, and awards badges for various achievements. It aims to gamify the charging experience with shareable visuals and stats.
Tesla's latest app update brings the Charging Passport, a retrospective feature that summarizes users' 2025 charging activities. Accessed via the Charging section on the app's home screen, it appears as an animated button that flashes like a neon sign once deployed. This server-side update is rolling out gradually, so not all users have it yet.
The feature breaks down charging data into engaging sections. The Favorites tab maps the most-visited Supercharger sites, while the Visited tab shows all locations on a larger map. The Longest Trip tab details the farthest journey, including chargers used along the way. Key statistics include the number of unique Superchargers visited, total charging sessions, miles added via charging, and the busiest charging day.
Adding a gamified element, the Charging Passport awards badges based on user behavior. The Explorer badge rewards visiting many unique Superchargers, and Iconic badges recognize stops at flagship sites like the Tesla Diner or Oasis Supercharger. Other badges include Green Saver for off-peak charging, Sustainable Saver for gas savings, Mega Charger for high kWh or MWh totals, Hard Worker for workplace charging, and First Supercharge after the initial session.
To encourage exploration, Tesla announced on X that in January, free Supercharging will go to nine users based on their Charging Passport data. Categories cover the longest distance between Superchargers, most energy charged, and most unique sites visited, with the top three in each receiving awards.
This update transforms routine charging stats into a fun, shareable year-end review, much like social media summaries, emphasizing travel and environmental impact without focusing on costs.