California man explores the world's largest Tesla Supercharger and tests to see how effective it is
Published on Dec 30, 2025 at 10:51 AM (UTC+4)
by Jason Fan
Last updated on Dec 30, 2025 at 12:59 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Jason Fan
If you think EV charging stations are boring, the largest Tesla Supercharger station, known as Tesla Oasis, is about to completely change your mind.
Located in Lost Hills, California, this sprawling facility is no simple pit stop.
Built to operate entirely off the grid, Tesla Oasis is designed to handle massive surges in charging demand without breaking a sweat.
And recently, Tesla invited the community out to prove that the largest Tesla Supercharger station in the world can deliver.
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The world’s largest Tesla Supercharger station can charge up to 1,000 EVs per day
The visit was documented in a YouTube video uploaded by the Tesla Owners Silicon Valley channel, where the host explored the site during Tesla’s official resiliency testing.
The idea behind the test was simple: simulate holiday-level traffic and see whether the station could cope.
To do that, Tesla brought together dozens of vehicles at once, plugging them in simultaneously to stress-test both the chargers and the energy system behind them.

While dedicated charging stations aren’t new, what sets Tesla Oasis apart is its sheer scale and self-sufficiency.
The station is powered by an 11-megawatt solar farm, backed up by as much as 39 megawatt-hours of on-site battery storage.
Together, that system can support charging for up to 1,000 EVs per day without pulling power from the local grid.
In total, the site features 164 Supercharger stalls, including 12 pull-through stalls designed for drivers towing trailers with their Cybertrucks.

In short, this is the ideal place for people taking their EVs on long-distance road trips.
Walking through the station, the host points out how deliberately Tesla designed the space.
There was artificial turf and shaded charging canopies, giving it a clean and sustainable feel.

While the on-site lounge isn’t open yet, Tesla has clearly planned for it, especially considering how brutally hot the area can get in summer.
In the video, the shade structures already make a noticeable difference for drivers stepping out of their cars.
The future of EV road trips is looking bright
One disappointment was the fact that the chargers installed aren’t Tesla’s newest V4 units.

On a more positive note, testing went smoothly even under cloudy conditions, which is exactly the kind of scenario Tesla wanted to evaluate.
At the end of the day, the world’s largest Supercharger station is very much a proof of concept.

If sites like this become more common, the future of EV road trips may involve fewer worries about queues, grid strain, or power availability.
That goes a long way to convince EV owners and the public alike that it’s actually ok to take EVs out for a road trip.
Tesla Supercharger network: Key milestones
2012: Tesla unveiled its first Supercharger stations alongside the Model S, promising fast and long-distance EV travel
2016: Tesla completed its major Supercharger corridors across the US and Europe, making long-distance electric road trips practical for the first time
2019: The company introduced V3 Superchargers, capable of delivering up to 250kW, dramatically reducing charging times
2021: Tesla hit a major milestone with 1 million Supercharger installations worldwide
2023: Superchargers began opening to non-Tesla EVs, signaling a shift towards broader EV adoption
2025: Tesla established the Tesla Oasis, the largest Tesla Supercharger station in the world, featuring 164 stalls
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Jason Fan is an experienced content creator who graduated from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore with a degree in communications. He then relocated to Australia during a millennial mid-life crisis. A fan of luxury travel and high-performance machines, he politely thanks chatbots just in case the AI apocalypse ever arrives. Jason covers a wide variety of topics, with a special focus on technology, planes and luxury.