Tesla EV charging cost page

Tesla Model S Dual Motor charging cost calculator

Estimate how much it costs to charge a Tesla Model S Dual Motor with its 95.0 kWh battery using your current charge level, target charge, and electricity price.

Tesla Model S Dual Motor

75 kWh battery

Common charging scenarios

Home top-up

20% → 80% · 45.0 kWh

18.00

Road trip prep

10% → 90% · 60.0 kWh

24.00

Full battery estimate

0% → 100% · 75.0 kWh

30.00

Compare similar EVs

Popular EV charging cost pages

Explore model-specific charging estimates with built-in battery data for some of the most searched electric vehicles.

Battery capacity

95.0 kWh

Brand hub

Tesla EV model list

Charging estimate inputs

Current charge, target charge, and electricity price

Benchmark charging costs for Tesla Model S Dual Motor

These server-rendered examples make the Tesla Model S Dual Motor page more useful before you touch the calculator. They show how the 95.0 kWh battery translates into typical charging sessions at three example electricity prices, expressed in your local currency per kWh.

Home top-up

20% to 80% adds about 57.0 kWh to the battery.

0.15 per kWh
8.55
0.25 per kWh
14.25
0.40 per kWh
22.80

Road trip prep

10% to 90% adds about 76.0 kWh to the battery.

0.15 per kWh
11.40
0.25 per kWh
19.00
0.40 per kWh
30.40

Full battery estimate

0% to 100% adds about 95.0 kWh to the battery.

0.15 per kWh
14.25
0.25 per kWh
23.75
0.40 per kWh
38.00

Real-world charging losses for Tesla Model S Dual Motor

A Tesla Model S Dual Motor 20% to 80% session stores about 57.0 kWh in the battery. At the wall, the real energy draw can be higher because AC/DC conversion, battery conditioning, and cable losses all add overhead.

Using a simple 8% to 15% charging-loss range, the same session may draw about 61.6 to 65.5 kWh. That is why the live calculator is best used as a battery-energy baseline, with a little headroom added for real-world home or public charging.

You can also browse the Tesla EV model list to compare how the 95.0 kWh battery in Tesla Model S Dual Motor sits alongside other models from the same brand.

20% to 80% wall-energy estimate

61.6 to 65.5 kWh

Based on 57.0 kWh stored in the battery plus an 8% to 15% loss assumption.

How Charge Cost estimates Tesla Model S Dual Motor charging costs

1. Battery data

This page starts with the 95.0 kWh battery capacity listed for Tesla Model S Dual Motor, so the baseline calculation is model-specific rather than generic.

2. Charge window

Your current charge and target charge determine how much battery energy is added. A smaller top-up costs less because fewer kWh need to be delivered.

3. Electricity price

The tool multiplies the required kWh by your price per kWh. If you pay more for public charging, taxes, or time-of-use tariffs, your real bill can be higher.

Frequently asked questions about charging a Tesla Model S Dual Motor

How much does it cost to charge a Tesla Model S Dual Motor?

Charge Cost helps estimate the charging cost of a Tesla Model S Dual Motor using its 95.0 kWh battery capacity, your current state of charge, target charge level, and electricity price. A full 0% to 100% battery estimate uses about 95.0 kWh before charging losses, so the cost changes directly with your electricity tariff.

What does a 20% to 80% charge add to a Tesla Model S Dual Motor?

Tesla Model S Dual Motor needs about 57.0 kWh to move from 20% to 80% battery. At example electricity prices of 0.15, 0.25, 0.40 in your local currency per kWh, that works out to roughly 8.55, 14.25, 22.80 in the same currency before charging losses.

Does the Tesla Model S Dual Motor charging cost estimate include charging losses?

The base estimate for Tesla Model S Dual Motor focuses on battery energy and electricity price. Real-world wall energy can be higher, so a 20% to 80% session may require about 61.6 to 65.5 kWh once typical charging losses are included.