Tesla’s iPhone app now supports Live Activities for Supercharging
- Tesla’s latest iOS app update (4.45.0) now supports Live Activities for Supercharging, allowing users to view their car’s Supercharging progress on their phone’s lock screen.
- The feature provides real-time updates on charging sessions, including time left, charge percentage, estimated cost, and charge speed.
- Supercharger Live Activities is currently only available for new Model 3 (mid-2023 & later) in Europe, with other models and regions to follow later.
- Tesla is also rolling out a new “Child Left Alone” feature, which alerts owners if they’ve forgotten their kid in the car, starting in Europe for newer Model 3s with in-cabin radar.
- The feature aims to protect children left unattended in vehicles and will be expanded to other models and regions “later,” according to Tesla.
Tesla’s latest iOS app update allows the user to view their car’s Supercharging progress on their phone’s lock screen, Not a Tesla App reports.
The feature takes advantage of Apple’s Live Activities feature, which gives apps the ability to display real-time updates on your lock screen, like showing your Uber is going to arrive or when your ParkMobile parking meter is about to expire. In Tesla’s case, it can keep you updated on the charging session and help alert you to move your car when it’s done to avoid idle fees.
The Supercharger Live Activity shows how much time is left in the session, your current charge percentage, an estimated cost, the charge speed, and how much energy you’ve added. Currently, it does not show up if you’re charging at home or non-Supercharger stalls.
Supercharger Live Activities is available now in the Tesla iOS app version 4.45.0 in the App Store. It’s the latest major feature addition to the app since Tesla enabled Apple Watch digital key support last December.
In addition to the iOS update, Tesla is also rolling out a new feature for some of its newer EVs that can alert owners if they’ve forgotten their kid in the car. The new “Child Left Alone” feature is only coming to Europe for now, specifically to the new Model 3 (mid-2023 and later), which includes in-cabin radar. The hardware currently can sense people in the front seats in lieu of needing seat sensors, but now it’s looking in the back seat, too. Tesla says it will roll out to other models and regions “later.”