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    Tesla Model S Maintenance Schedule: What You Really Need to Do
    Maintenance·9 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Tesla Model S Maintenance Schedule: What You Really Need to Do

    tesla-model-smaintenance-scheduleev-maintenancebattery-healthbrakes-and-tiresused-evsownership-coststesla-serviceev-charging

    Table of Contents

    • Why the Model S maintenance schedule looks so strange
    • Official Tesla Model S maintenance intervals
    • Model S maintenance schedule by year and mileage
    • What you should check more often than Tesla says
    • Typical Tesla Model S maintenance costs
    • Maintenance red flags when buying a used Model S
    • DIY vs Tesla service: what owners can safely handle
    • How Recharged evaluates Model S maintenance and battery health
    • Tesla Model S maintenance FAQ
    • Bottom line on the Model S maintenance schedule

    If you’re coming from a gas car, the Tesla Model S maintenance schedule looks almost suspiciously light, no oil changes, no timing belts, no transmission services. Tesla says most items are “as needed,” but that doesn’t mean you can ignore maintenance and hope Autopilot will save you. Especially if you’re shopping used, understanding what really needs attention, and when, can save you thousands.

    Important context for 2026 and beyond

    Tesla has announced that Model S production will end in 2026, but the company will continue supporting existing cars with parts and software. That makes a clear, third‑party view on maintenance and long‑term health more valuable than ever, particularly for used‑car buyers.

    Why the Model S maintenance schedule looks so strange

    Tesla’s official stance is that Model S maintenance is largely condition‑based, not tied to strict mileage like a traditional service book. The result is a short list of recurring items, brake fluid checks, cabin filters, tire rotations, brake caliper lubrication, and a long list of things you’ll never see again, like oil changes and exhaust work.

    What your Model S doesn’t need

    • No engine oil or oil filter changes
    • No spark plugs, coils, or fuel system service
    • No transmission fluid changes on a fixed schedule
    • No smog checks or emissions equipment service
    • No timing belt/chain replacements

    What still matters a lot

    • Tires and alignment – heavy EV, high torque
    • Brakes – especially calipers in salty climates
    • Cabin air & HEPA filters
    • Suspension and steering components
    • Software, sensors and high‑voltage safety checks

    Think like an airline, not a tuner shop

    Instead of modding your Model S, you’re managing a high‑tech appliance. The goal is predictable, boring reliability: keep tires, brakes, filters, and software current and let the motor and battery do their quiet, drama‑free work.

    Official Tesla Model S maintenance intervals

    Tesla’s current Model S Owner’s Manual boils the recurring maintenance items down to a surprisingly short list. For modern Model S vehicles, Tesla recommends:

    Core Tesla Model S service intervals

    High‑level maintenance intervals from Tesla guidance, applicable to most late‑model Model S vehicles. Always verify specifics in your in‑car manual or app.

    ItemRecommended intervalNotes
    Brake fluid health checkEvery 4 yearsTest and replace only if needed; hard driving or hot climates may justify sooner checks.
    Cabin air filterEvery 3 years (recent S)Earlier Model S generations often used a 2‑year interval; many owners still follow 2–3 years.
    HEPA / Bioweapon Defense filters (if equipped)Every 3 yearsApplies to cars with the HEPA package.
    Wiper bladesEvery 1 yearOr whenever streaking, chatter, or cracked rubber appears.
    Clean & lubricate brake calipersEvery 12 months or 12,500 miles in salted‑road regionsCrucial for owners in the Northeast, Midwest, Canada, etc.
    Tire rotationAround every 6,250 miles (10,000 km) or when tread difference is ≥ 2/32 inSome manuals show only a km interval; Tesla’s support guidance also cites ~6,250‑mile rotations.

    Tesla can update these recommendations over time, so treat this as a framework, not religious doctrine.

    Check your specific car’s manual

    Tesla quietly updates maintenance language over time and by region. Always confirm the latest intervals in your in‑car manual or Tesla account, especially if you own an early‑production Model S.

    Model S maintenance schedule by year and mileage

    To make Tesla’s minimalistic schedule more practical, here’s how those items translate into a simple, real‑world maintenance plan. This applies whether you go to Tesla, a trusted EV‑savvy shop, or a mix of both.

    Year 1 / ~10,000–12,500 miles

    Tire rotation and tread inspection

    Have your Model S tires rotated roughly every 6,000–7,000 miles, or whenever the tread depth differs by 2/32 inch or more. This helps tame the inner‑edge wear that haunts many heavy EVs.

    Basic brake and suspension check

    Ask the shop to inspect pads, rotors, calipers, and suspension joints. Regenerative braking saves pads, but calipers can still seize in salty climates.

    Wiper blades and washer system

    Replace the wiper blades annually, especially if you live where sun or ice is harsh on rubber. Top up washer fluid as needed.

    Software and alerts review

    Make a habit of actually reading your Tesla app notifications and in‑car alerts. Many emerging issues, 12V battery, tire pressure, sensors, show up here first.

    Year 2 / ~20,000–25,000 miles

    Repeat Year‑1 checks

    Rotate tires again, inspect brakes and suspension, check wipers and washers, and review alerts.

    Consider early cabin air filter replacement

    If you drive in dusty, urban, or smoky areas, do the cabin filter at 2 years instead of waiting for 3.

    Alignment check (especially if you see uneven wear)

    A mild pull, crooked steering wheel, or uneven tire wear is your clue to get an alignment.

    Year 3 / ~30,000–37,500 miles

    Cabin air filter replacement

    By year 3, almost every Model S should have its cabin filter replaced. Many independent shops and some owners handle this themselves.

    HEPA filter service (if equipped)

    If your car has the big HEPA filter, plan on replacing it around year 3 as well.

    Brake inspection with an eye on calipers

    If you’re in a winter‑salt region and haven’t yet done a caliper clean/lube, now is the time.

    Year 4 / ~40,000–50,000 miles

    Brake fluid health check

    Tesla recommends testing the brake fluid at 4 years and replacing it only if necessary. Many owners simply replace it on schedule because the cost is modest and the stakes, your braking system, are high.

    Comprehensive suspension and steering inspection

    By 40,000–50,000 miles, heavy EVs can begin to show wear in control arms, bushings, and links. Catching play or torn bushings early can save tires and alignments.

    High‑voltage and charging hardware inspection

    Have Tesla or an EV‑specialist shop inspect the charge port, high‑voltage cables, and underbody shielding for damage, especially if you’ve had curb or debris encounters.

    Beyond year 4, the pattern mostly repeats: rotate tires regularly, inspect brakes and suspension at least annually, swap filters every few years, and test brake fluid on that 4‑year rhythm. The big battery and drive unit are designed to be largely hands‑off, while software keeps watch in the background.

    What you should check more often than Tesla says

    Tesla’s minimalism is refreshing, but in the real world, potholes, winter salt, performance launches, there are items savvy Model S owners watch more closely than the official schedule suggests.

    High‑attention items for long‑term Model S ownership

    These don’t always have officially short intervals, but they can make or break your ownership experience.

    Tires and alignment

    The Model S is heavy and quick. Inner‑edge wear is common, especially on performance or low‑profile tires. Check tread depth across the width at least every 3,000–4,000 miles.

    12V (or low‑voltage) battery

    Early Model S cars used a traditional 12V battery that can fail around the 4–6‑year mark. Newer cars use a low‑voltage lithium pack. In both cases, don’t ignore warnings, replace proactively.

    Brakes & calipers in salty regions

    In the Northeast and Midwest, annual caliper cleaning and lubrication is cheap insurance against seized hardware and ugly brake noise.

    Charging port & cable

    Inspect the charge port door, contacts, and your home charging cable regularly. Look for heat discoloration, cracks, or intermittent connections.

    Door handles & seals (early cars)

    Older retractable door handles are notorious for intermittent failures. Listen for struggling motors, and check for water leaks or wind noise around seals.

    Underbody and battery tray

    After any big impact, curb, debris, deep pothole, have the underbody inspected. The battery pack is tough, but you don’t want a mystery gouge living under a six‑figure car.

    Don’t open the battery coolant system

    Tesla states that the Model S battery coolant is designed to last the life of the vehicle under normal conditions. Opening the coolant reservoir yourself is a fast way to void coverage or damage components. Leave any high‑voltage cooling work to trained EV techs.

    Typical Tesla Model S maintenance costs

    Tesla estimates annual maintenance costs for the Model S in roughly the mid‑hundreds of dollars, depending on mileage and driving style. In practice, costs tend to cluster around tires, brakes, and the occasional suspension component, not routine engine service like a gas sedan.

    Model S maintenance cost snapshot (typical U.S. owner)

    $338–$580
    Annual Tesla estimate
    Tesla’s own guidance for average Model S yearly maintenance costs under normal use.
    15k mi
    Typical yearly mileage
    Heavy‑use commuters and road‑trippers may see higher tire and alignment costs.
    $60–$75
    Tire rotation
    Typical Tesla Service Center price; many tire shops are slightly cheaper or free with tire purchase.
    $150–$300
    Brake service
    Approximate range for a brake fluid change plus a caliper clean/lube at many shops.

    Tires are usually the big ticket. A Model S on 19‑inch wheels can get decent life from touring tires if you rotate on schedule; 21‑inch performance rubber will cost more and wear faster. Factor a full set of tires into your 2–3‑year budget, especially if you drive aggressively.

    The quiet payoff vs. a gas luxury sedan

    Once you subtract oil changes, spark plugs, transmission service, and emissions repairs, a well‑maintained Model S can be significantly cheaper to maintain than a German V8 luxury car over 5–8 years, even accounting for pricey tires.

    Maintenance red flags when buying a used Model S

    If you’re shopping used, especially as Tesla winds down new Model S production, maintenance history becomes part of the car’s DNA. Here’s what to look for before you fall for the big screen and the launch mode party trick.

    Used Model S: service red flags to investigate

    A clean Carfax is not the same thing as a healthy, low‑stress car.

    Sparse or missing service records

    A Model S doesn’t need a stamped booklet, but you should see some evidence of tire rotations, brake checks, and basic inspections. A total blank is a conversation you want to have before you buy.

    Uneven or extreme tire wear

    Inner‑edge cords showing, cupping, or mismatched tires can hint at alignment issues, bent components, or just a hard‑driven life.

    Brake fluid never tested or changed

    On a 6‑ to 8‑year‑old car, no mention of brake fluid service is a yellow flag. It’s not a dealbreaker by itself, but plan to address it immediately.

    Persistent warnings in the instrument cluster

    Anything high‑voltage, battery, or drive‑unit related deserves careful diagnosis. Occasional sensor quirks are one thing; repeated power‑train alerts are another.

    Home‑brew high‑voltage or body repairs

    Enthusiasts can safely handle filters, wipers, and cosmetic work. Battery pack openings, charge‑port rewiring, or DIY collision repairs around the pack are serious red flags.

    Noticeable suspension clunks or steering play

    On a test drive, listen for front‑end clunks over bumps and feel for looseness in the steering. A quiet cabin makes any bad noise stand out.

    How Recharged de‑risks used Model S purchases

    Every Model S we list includes a Recharged Score Report with verified battery health, tire and brake measurements, and a check for accident and high‑voltage red flags. If something in the history doesn’t smell right, the car doesn’t make the cut.

    DIY vs Tesla service: what owners can safely handle

    One perk of the Model S is that some maintenance tasks are genuinely approachable for an engaged owner with basic tools. Others belong firmly in the “do not touch” category unless you enjoy expensive cautionary tales.

    Reasonable DIY tasks

    • Tire pressure checks and visual tread inspections
    • Wiper blade replacement
    • Cabin air filter replacement (if you’re comfortable removing trim panels)
    • Washer fluid top‑ups and basic detailing
    • Checking for play in door handles, latches, and seals

    If you’re using jack stands and rotating tires yourself, learn the correct Tesla jack pad locations first, damaging the battery pack is not a DIY rite of passage.

    Leave these to Tesla or an EV specialist

    • High‑voltage battery, coolant, and contactor work
    • Drive unit repairs or inverter issues
    • Charge port and high‑voltage cabling
    • Structural body repairs near the battery pack
    • Advanced diagnostics for repeated power‑train or Autopilot warnings

    In these areas, Tesla’s experience (or a dedicated EV shop’s) is worth more than the labor rate you’re trying to save.

    The invisible danger: voltage and amperage

    Your Model S battery pack operates at hundreds of volts. That’s more than enough to be lethal. Treat the orange‑cabled parts of the car as if they’re behind glass. If a job touches them, even indirectly, let a pro handle it.

    How Recharged evaluates Model S maintenance and battery health

    With Model S moving into its mature, mostly‑used phase, the difference between a great car and a ticking time bomb is history and diagnostics. That’s where a structured evaluation is worth more than a quick spin around the block.

    Mechanic inspecting a Tesla Model S wheel and brake components on a lift
    Tires, brakes, and suspension tell you as much about a Model S’s real life as the odometer does.
    • Battery and charging health: We look at usable capacity, charge behavior, and any history of DC fast‑charging abuse or high‑voltage system alerts.
    • Brake and tire condition: Tread depth across the full width, sidewall condition, rotor wear, and caliper operation, especially on cars from salty states.
    • Suspension & steering: Signs of worn arms, bushings, or shocks that could hint at hard use or neglected roads.
    • Software and recall status: Making sure critical updates and campaigns have been addressed.
    • Service history sanity‑check: We look for logical patterns of tire, brake, and filter service that match the car’s age and mileage.

    All of that rolls into the Recharged Score Report that comes with every vehicle we sell. For a Model S shopper, it’s essentially a cheat sheet for, “Is this one of the good ones?”

    Tesla Model S maintenance FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about Model S maintenance

    Bottom line on the Model S maintenance schedule

    The Tesla Model S maintenance schedule is short on line items but long on consequences if you ignore the few things that matter: tires, brakes, suspensions, filters, and software. Do those on time, and the big‑ticket hardware, the motor and battery, tends to fade into the background, doing anonymous, electric work for years at a stretch.

    If you already own a Model S, use the intervals in this guide as a practical checklist and let your in‑car alerts fill in the gaps. If you’re shopping for one, especially used, look for a car whose history makes sense, and don’t be afraid to walk away from something that feels like a performance demo car in retirement. And if you’d prefer a shortcut, every used Model S at Recharged comes with a Recharged Score Report, expert EV guidance, and nationwide delivery, so the only maintenance you have to worry about on day one is deciding where your first road trip will be.

    Tesla on Recharged

    See all →
    2023 Tesla Model S

    2023 Tesla Model S

    30K mi•350 mi range
    4.7/5Recharged Score
    $54,998
    2019 Tesla Model S

    2019 Tesla Model S

    Long Range•49K mi•259 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $30,998
    Full Self-Driving
    2022 Tesla Model S

    2022 Tesla Model S

    Long Range•52K mi•405 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $43,998

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