This week, Tesla opened North America’s northernmost Supercharger in Fairbanks, Alaska, completing the EV charging corridor between Anchorage and Fairbanks.
It has been quite some time since Tesla installed its first 4-stall Supercharging location in Alaska in 2022. Over the past few years, progress has been very slow, with only a few Supercharging sites installed in the state. However, things improved recently. According to Drive Tesla Canada, Tesla deployed three new sites in Alaska in December 2025.
The latest Supercharging station in Fairbanks features eight 325-kW stalls (V4 dispensers powered from V3 power electronics cabinet). The station is available not only to Tesla EVs but also to Tesla’s NACS partners. The base rate for Tesla EVs is $0.43/kWh, while other EVs must pay $0.60/kWh.
Despite ongoing expansion in Canada and Alaska, the two networks remain separate. As we understand it, Tesla is not building a corridor simply because the EV traffic between western Canada/US and Alaska is too low to justify the investment.
Overall, Alaska has the fewest EV charging points of any US state. According to the Alternative Fuels Data Center (AFDC), there are only 111 AC Level 2 ports and 74 DC fast-charging ports.
The northernmost Tesla Superchargers globally are located in Norway. The network’s total number of stalls exceeded 75,000 in November 2025.








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