Report: Tesla Owner In China Faces Shocking $600,000 Supercharging Bill
Reportedly, it was due to a bug in the back-end systems.
An interesting story was recently reported by the Chinese media about a strange bug in the Tesla Supercharging billing system.
According to CnEVPost (after Weibo user @滤镜粉碎机), a Chinese Tesla Model 3 user received an alert from the Tesla app that his vehicle is banned from the Tesla Supercharging network due to unpaid fees of 3,846,306 CNY ($608,708).
Such a high amount for charging sounds weird, especially since the user had some free Supercharging credits.
CnEVPost's article includes images that show 1,923,720 kWh (almost 2 GWh) of energy, at 2 CNY per kWh.
According to the estimations - it would be enough to fully charge the 2020 Tesla Model 3 Standard Range Plus (0-100%) about 32,000 times.
The extreme bill happens to be an obvious mistake and according to further info, the user received a response from Tesla customer service, saying that "there was an error in the back-end systems of some vehicles." It will be fixed.
Nonetheless, it means that there might be more than one user that faced a shocking notification and was mistakenly banned from Supercharging.
We don't know what caused the issue, but according to the article, Tesla was tweaking the Supercharging idle fee to improve the utilization of the charging stalls. The new idle fee in China is 3.20 CNY per minute (6.40 CNY if the station is 100% occupied).
For reference, in the US, the idle fee stands at $0.50 per minute ($1.00 if the station is 100% occupied). In many European countries, including Germany, the numbers are the same but in euros (€0.50 or €1.00 per minute).
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
Teslas Are More Likely To Hit 250,000 Miles Than Almost Every Car Brand
General Motors Is Bringing Sodium-Ion Battery Production To America
The Best EV Lease And Finance Deals In June 2026
GM Is Making EV Charging A Lot Simpler With Energy Pass, NACS On All 2027 Models
Tesla Model Y Battery Tested After 16,000 Miles Of Mostly Fast Charging
Mexican EV Startup Unveils $8,600 State-Backed EV With 6 Seats
It's Still Way More Expensive To Insure An EV. But That's Changing