Tesla owner shares reality of EV ownership after 10 years

Published on Jun 27, 2025 at 8:09 PM (UTC+4)
by Callum Tokody

Last updated on Jun 25, 2025 at 1:36 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Kate Bain

This Tesla owner has given a candid breakdown of life with his EV after a full decade of driving it.

This is not speculation or brand loyalty talking.

It is a firsthand account from someone who has driven Teslas and other electric cars for thousands of miles.

The goal is not to sell the concept but to explain how EV ownership really works in daily life, what still needs improvement, and break down some myths.

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What living with an electric car really involves

From the start, this Tesla owner was clear, saying that if you could not charge at home, EV ownership would be a compromise.

If you can, the experience is effortless. Plugging in at night means you wake up every day with a full battery.

It is a simple shift in charging habits that transforms convenience. Unlike petrol stops, you’re not wasting any time.

The car charges while you sleep, work, or eat.

Another key lesson from this Tesla owner was to forget about official range figures.

Real range is always lower. After years of testing, they suggest deducting 20 to 25 percent from any advertised number and more in winter.

EVs lose range in cold weather just like petrol cars burn more fuel.

The difference is you feel it more because charging takes time.

But when you understand that range, plan ahead, and drive accordingly, it rarely causes a problem.

The Tesla owner also stressed the importance of proactive charging habits.

Long trips are easy if you stop and top up before the battery gets low.

That might mean plugging in at 60 percent while grabbing lunch instead of waiting until it hits red.

On a 350-mile drive, one smart stop at a charger attached to a service station can make the whole experience seamless.

This kind of planning makes range anxiety a non-issue most of the time.

Day-to-day driving with electric cars, especially Teslas, becomes second nature.

Charging habits form quickly, and you don’t have to think about it.

The Tesla owner pointed out that the time saved by never visiting a fuel station outweighed the occasional longer stop on a trip.

He said real range didn’t affect short journeys either.

For the 99 percent of daily trips under 100 miles, electric cars are more than capable.

Cost has also changed significantly. This Tesla driver admitted that new EVs still carry a price premium, but the used market has started to close that gap.

Servicing is cheaper, thanks to fewer moving parts. Insurance can be slightly higher, but not dramatically.

For those with access to home charging, he said fuel costs were far lower than petrol or diesel.

According to this Tesla owner, the savings added up quickly when the car was used regularly.

Where EV ownership is heading next

The Tesla owner also spoke directly to one of the biggest concerns: battery longevity.

Their experience showed that modern electric cars, including Teslas, routinely exceeded 100,000 miles on original batteries with no performance drop.

Most models include an eight-year battery warranty, and with proper battery management and temperature controls, degradation is slower than many people expect.

Repairs are still a grey area.

The Tesla owner acknowledged that battery-related fixes were not always straightforward and that trained technicians were still in short supply.

But they also highlight that battery faults were rare and usually involved small components.

As EV numbers grow, the support network will expand just as it has for every other vehicle technology.

One of the owner’s favorite features was pre-conditioning.

Whether warming the car in winter or cooling it in summer, the ability to do so remotely and without starting the car added comfort and convenience.

Yes, it could impact real range slightly, but he said the benefits outweighed the trade-off.

Combined with automatic charging controls and protective buffers, he said it made daily EV ownership feel modern and easy.

For this Tesla owner, EV ownership was not perfect but it was practical.

The experience depends on understanding your own habits and choosing a car that matches your needs.

With realistic expectations, solid charging habits, and access to home power, EVs like Teslas become more convenient than combustion cars.

The key is not hype or headlines, it’s knowing how to use the technology properly.

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Callum Tokody is a content writer at Supercar Blondie, where he covers the latest in the automotive world with a focus on design and performance. Callum has a background in automotive journalism and has contributed to a range of publications in Australia and the UK. Outside of work, he’s a design enthusiast with a soft spot for anything with a V8 and a good story.