Reference model
Nissan Leaf
- Range
- 345 km*
- Battery
- 59 kWh
- DC charging
- 44 kW
EV switching guide
Change carsComing from a Nissan Leaf?
A practical answer based on range, charging, compatible stations, running costs and the features you use every day.
Reference model
Reference model
If your battery still covers your daily loop comfortably, keeping the LEAF is rational. Switch when charging or range starts deciding where you can go.
Quick answer
Meaningful upgradeThe Tesla Model 3 brings several practical improvements. It makes most sense if those changes solve problems you already feel with the Nissan Leaf.
Range per charge
Current · LEAF
345 km
New · Model 3
580 km
235 km more range
10–80% charging
Current · LEAF
56 min
New · Model 3
27 min
29 min less waiting
Charging stops on a 600 km day
Current · LEAF
2 stops
New · Model 3
1 stop
Fewer charging breaks
Your result
Start with what improves, then check the trade-offs and what will still feel familiar.
Nothing significant — the two cars match here.
Side by side
Your LEAF
Model 3
*Estimated mixed-condition real-world range. Missing database values are omitted or marked unavailable.
For you, the owner
A specification only matters when it changes your routine. Here is how moving from your Nissan Leaf to the Tesla Model 3 translates into ordinary weeks, longer journeys and the habits you already have.
Your normal week
You gain about 235 km of estimated real-world range, so you can leave a larger buffer instead of watching the remaining percentage as closely. At the same €0.30/kWh home tariff, the estimate is about €105 less per 10,000 km.
Beyond the daily commute
On a 600 km day, our route estimate falls from 2 charging stops to 1. That means less planning and more freedom to pass a busy charger. For a 10–80% top-up, the estimates move from roughly 56 minutes in the LEAF to 27 minutes in the Model 3 under the stated charging assumptions. PlugSphere currently matches the new car with 1,872 more compatible charging locations, giving you more fallback choices when a site is full or unavailable.
Living with the car
Both cars have a heat pump, so efficient winter cabin heating remains familiar. Battery preconditioning also means the new car can prepare its pack before a fast-charge stop on cold days. You keep the same 5-seat capacity.
The honest decision
Switch if real-world range, 10–80% fast charge, efficiency solve frustrations you feel regularly. The move should remove a real limitation—not simply put a newer car on the driveway.
Keep the Nissan Leaf if it still covers your routine comfortably and its charging stops do not shape your journeys. The data does not reveal a major penalty for keeping it. Some Nissan Leafs are now around 15 years old, but age alone is not a reason to replace a healthy battery.
Charging
Compatible-location counts come from PlugSphere’s charging-station database and each reference car’s stored plug standard.
Check a route with the Model 3 →Today
142,251
compatible charging locations
After switching
144,123
compatible charging locations
DC fast locations are matched at 50 kW or more. Counts change as the station database is refreshed.
Your Nissan Leaf today
The oldest Nissan Leafs are now ~15 years old. Fleet telemetry puts typical degradation at 1.5–2% per year — the bands below apply that to each version's original range.
*PlugSphere estimates; actual battery health varies with climate and charging habits. We never estimate used-car prices.
Money
Running-cost estimates use the same €0.30/kWh home tariff for both cars. Purchase prices appear only where a current market record exists.
Home energy · 10,000 km
LEAF
€513
Model 3
€408
Current Model 3 prices
Answers computed from both cars' data.
If range or charging speed limits you, the data shows you gain 235 km of real-world range and a 10–80% stop of about 27 minutes. If your LEAF still covers your daily loop comfortably, keeping it is a rational choice.
Real-world range, 10–80% fast charge, Efficiency.
The oldest Nissan Leafs are now about 15 years old and have typically lost 1.5–2% of range per year. The case for switching starts when you charge to 100% daily just to feel safe, or when fast-charging stops dictate your routes.
Networks are retiring CHAdeMO while CCS grows: PlugSphere counts 31,436 DC stations your LEAF can use versus 38,056 for a CCS car like the Tesla Model 3 — and the gap widens every import.
Next steps
Use the route you actually drive, then inspect the full reference-car record. That will tell you more than another generic best-EV list.