Tesla has just confirmed the deployment of its second “true” V4 Supercharging station (with a V4 power electronics cabinet and V4 dispensers) in the United States. The new infrastructure offers up to 500 kW of power per stall and fully supports high-voltage battery systems (up to 1,000 V).
V4 Supercharging Station in Utah: 500 kW
The first “true” V4 site was launched in Redwood City, California, on September 29, 2025. The second station is located in Taylorsville, Utah (see map here).
There are two V4 power electronics cabinets — each delivers a total power output of 1.2 MW and can supply power to up to eight V4 dispensers (up to 500 kW per stall). However, as of launch on January 23, 2026, only eight V4 stalls are live.
Max de Zegher, Tesla’s Director of Charging North America (@MdeZegher / X), explained that the other eight dispensers need the latest firmware update and are expected to go live by February. At that time, the site will have 16 dispensers with 500-kW output.
The station is available to all Tesla EVs and Tesla’s NACS partners. Like all North American Tesla Superchargers, the dispensers feature NACS charging plugs. CCS1-compatible EVs have to bring their own NACS-to-CCS1 adapters.
The price of energy varies depending on the time of day and EV (Tesla or non-Tesla). Tesla can charge for $0.27-$0.37/kWh, while non-Tesla EVs can charge for $0.38-$0.52/kWh:

The second “true” Tesla V4 Supercharging station in the US (Taylorsville, Utah): Pricing. (Source: Tesla)
More V4 Supercharging Stations Coming
Tesla is actively working to deploy more “true” V4 Supercharging stations in the US. The good news is that the projects concern not only California (the nation’s largest EV market), but various other states, including Utah, Texas, Oregon, and Tennessee.
Here are some additional stats for V4 Tesla Superchargers for light-duty vehicles:
- V4 power electronics cabinet: 1.2 MW (1,200 kW) with >96% efficiency
- Up to 8 V4 dispensers with power-sharing
- V4 dispensers maximum output: up to 500 kW for cars
(1.2 MW for trucks using the MCS connector) - Output voltage: 180-1,000 V
- Output current: 615 A
The same V4 Superchargers are available for third-party businesses.







Can’t wait to see more of these! Roll out will be slow, and right now we just need more chargers period, regardless of capability.