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Buying Advice Buying a Used Tesla? Here’s What Most Owners Learn the Hard Way

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Buying a Used Tesla? Here’s What Most Owners Learn the Hard Way​

A lot of people buy a used Tesla because of the acceleration, technology, and low charging costs but many underestimate how important battery health and suspension condition become after around 80,000–120,000 miles (130,000–190,000 km).

One of the most expensive and common issues on older Model S and Model X vehicles is suspension wear, including air suspension failures, control arms, and bushings. Early models also experienced MCU/screen failures, battery heater problems, and thermal management issues. On Model 3 and Model Y, owners often report rattles, uneven panel gaps, suspension noises, and very fast tire wear because EVs are heavy and deliver instant torque instantly.

Real-world battery degradation is usually not catastrophic, but after roughly 150,000–200,000 miles (240,000–320,000 km), range loss and repair risks become much more important financially. Many Teslas can still run well beyond 250,000 miles (400,000 km), but repair costs outside warranty can surprise first-time EV buyers.

Charging is still significantly cheaper than gasoline in most cases. In Europe, a full home charge usually costs around €8–15, while in the US many owners charge for roughly $10–20 depending on electricity prices. Supercharging is faster but noticeably more expensive, especially in California and parts of Western Europe.

A Model Y typically consumes around 15–20 kWh/100 km (24–32 kWh/100 miles), while aggressive highway driving, cold weather, or high speeds can increase consumption dramatically both in Europe and the US.

The smartest thing a used Tesla buyer can do is check battery degradation, service history, accident repairs, suspension replacements, and how heavily the car relied on Supercharging because these factors often matter more long term than the mileage itself.

What has been your real-world experience with used Teslas after high mileage?

-Admin
 

Buying a Used Tesla? Here’s What Most Owners Learn the Hard Way​

A lot of people buy a used Tesla because of the acceleration, technology, and low charging costs but many underestimate how important battery health and suspension condition become after around 80,000–120,000 miles (130,000–190,000 km).

One of the most expensive and common issues on older Model S and Model X vehicles is suspension wear, including air suspension failures, control arms, and bushings. Early models also experienced MCU/screen failures, battery heater problems, and thermal management issues. On Model 3 and Model Y, owners often report rattles, uneven panel gaps, suspension noises, and very fast tire wear because EVs are heavy and deliver instant torque instantly.

Real-world battery degradation is usually not catastrophic, but after roughly 150,000–200,000 miles (240,000–320,000 km), range loss and repair risks become much more important financially. Many Teslas can still run well beyond 250,000 miles (400,000 km), but repair costs outside warranty can surprise first-time EV buyers.

Charging is still significantly cheaper than gasoline in most cases. In Europe, a full home charge usually costs around €8–15, while in the US many owners charge for roughly $10–20 depending on electricity prices. Supercharging is faster but noticeably more expensive, especially in California and parts of Western Europe.

A Model Y typically consumes around 15–20 kWh/100 km (24–32 kWh/100 miles), while aggressive highway driving, cold weather, or high speeds can increase consumption dramatically both in Europe and the US.

The smartest thing a used Tesla buyer can do is check battery degradation, service history, accident repairs, suspension replacements, and how heavily the car relied on Supercharging because these factors often matter more long term than the mileage itself.

What has been your real-world experience with used Teslas after high mileage?

-Admin

What many first-time used Tesla buyers underestimate is how different high-mileage EV ownership feels compared to a gasoline car.

A Tesla can still feel modern and extremely fast even after 120,000+ miles (190,000+ km), but once suspension parts, tires, thermal systems, or battery-related components start aging, repair costs can rise very quickly outside warranty. I also think people focus too much on battery degradation percentages while ignoring how important charging history and previous owner habits really are.

Another thing worth mentioning is that real-world highway range at 75–85 mph (120–137 km/h) can look very different from official numbers, especially in winter or during aggressive driving. That catches many new EV owners by surprise.

At the same time, the software experience, charging infrastructure, and day-to-day smoothness are still ahead of many competitors even today.

Personally, I think a well-maintained high-mileage Tesla can still be an excellent buy but only if buyers treat it more like a premium performance vehicle than a “cheap EV to maintain.”

What mileage would personally make you uncomfortable buying a used Tesla?
 
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