Vehicle fitment

Best EV Chargers for Tesla Model Y

Best with a 40A to 48A Level 2 setup at home.

Connector: NACSA 200A panel is easiest, but load-managed 100A installs are common.

Top recommended chargers

BrandModelConnectorMax outputInstall typeBest forPrice range
TeslaWall ConnectorNACS11.5 kW / 48AHardwiredTesla-first setups$420-$500
ChargePointHome FlexJ1772 / NACS variant12 kW / 50APlug-in or hardwiredFlexible mainstream installs$499-$749
EmporiaEV ChargerJ1772 / NACS variant11.5 kW / 48APlug-in or hardwiredValue-minded smart charging$399-$549
Best overall

Tesla Wall Connector

Best smart charger

ChargePoint Home Flex

Best value pick

Emporia EV Charger

Garage fit

Most garage installs can prioritize cable handling and cleaner hardwired placement.

100A panel planning

Load management and realistic daily mileage matter more than chasing maximum output.

200A panel planning

Higher-amperage installs are easier to support, especially when future vehicle flexibility matters.

Related pages

Amazon charger research for Tesla Model Y

These tagged Amazon paths focus on charger and accessory research. Use installer quote pages when wiring, permits, or panel capacity are the real decision.

As an Amazon Associate, EV.Market earns from qualifying purchases.

Tesla Wall Connector

Tesla and NACS-first home charging

Connector
NACS
Install type
Hardwired
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Tesla Universal Wall Connector

Mixed NACS and J1772 households

Connector
NACS / J1772 adapter-ready
Install type
Hardwired
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NACS Level 2 EV Chargers

Tesla-style connector shopping

Connector
NACS
Install type
Plug-in or hardwired
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J1772 to Tesla Adapters

Using J1772 charging hardware with Tesla vehicles

Connector
J1772 to NACS
Install type
Adapter
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Tesla Mobile Connector

Portable Tesla charging and backup cable kits

Connector
NACS
Install type
Portable
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Tesla Mobile Connector Bundles

Tesla owners comparing portable adapter options

Connector
NACS
Install type
Portable
Check Today's Price

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a hardwired charger?

Not always. Plug-in chargers can work well, but hardwired setups often make sense for higher amperage or cleaner permanent installs.

Can a 100 amp panel still support home charging?

Sometimes yes. The key question is not the panel label alone, but how much spare capacity exists after the home's existing loads are considered.

Why use a local installer page instead of just buying a charger?

Because charger selection and installation complexity are connected. Local quote pages help turn product research into a realistic home setup.