Tesla is making all Superchargers free in Europe for a day in celebration of 10 years of Supercharging on the continent. The Supercharger network launched 11 years ago. Tesla decided to deploy its own DC fast-charging stations because virtually no one else was at the time or certainly not at the scale that the automaker needed to support its planned fleet. The then California-based company first started deploying stations locally, but it quickly expanded all around the world. Tesla announced that today marks the 10-year anniversary of the first Superchargers being deployed in Europe – more specifically in Norway: 10 years ago today, the first 6 Supercharger stations opened in Norway. Now, our network spans 36 countries, 1000+ sites & 13k+ Supercharger posts—enabling freedom of travel, no matter your destination. To celebrate, Tesla announced that it won’t charge you to charge on the Supercharger network in Europe today: Btw, Supercharging in Europe is free to all today! This includes locations open to all EVs (70% of our network!) ✌️⚡️✌️ — Tesla Europe (@teslaeurope) August 29, 2023 The automaker makes it sound like even non-Tesla electric vehicles will be able to charge for free. Tesla has yet to completely open its Supercharger network in Europe to non-Tesla EVs, but 70% of them already are accessible to other EVs. So if you are in Europe, go get yourself a full charge, compliments of Tesla. Post navigation Toyota takes another hit, suspending all assembly operations in Japan Germany OKs Ford’s semi-autonomous BlueCruise feature, enabling hands-free driving