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Review 7 April 2026 14 min read

Tesla Model 3 Long Range Review: Is It Worth $62k in Australia?

Written by Uzzi, CarSorted Editorial Team · 7 April 2026

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The Quick Verdict

The Model 3 Long Range is the best all-round electric sedan you can buy in Australia right now. 750km WLTP range from a 77.8kWh battery, 250kW Supercharger access, a 682L boot, and running costs under $700 a year make it genuinely hard to argue against. It's not cheap at $61,900 before on-roads, and the minimalist interior still divides opinion, but nothing else in this price bracket matches it for efficiency, range, and long-distance usability.

What Does the Model 3 Cost in Australia?

Tesla simplified the Model 3 Highland lineup into three variants. Here's what you're looking at:

VariantRRPPowerWLTP RangeBattery
Standard Range RWD$54,900208kW520km60kWh
Long Range RWD$61,900239kW750km77.8kWh
Performance AWD$72,900343kW571km77.8kWh

Driveaway, the Long Range lands around $63,500-$65,000 depending on your state. Victoria's EV tax adds about $900/year on top if you're doing 15,000km. NSW and QLD buyers get a slightly better deal on stamp duty.

The $7,000 jump from Standard Range to Long Range is, honestly, the best money you'll spend on any EV in Australia. You get 230km more range, faster DC charging (250kW vs 170kW), and slightly more power. That extra range turns the Model 3 from a "mostly city car" into a genuine touring machine. Sydney to Melbourne on a single charge becomes realistic in mild weather. That's the variant we're reviewing here.

Running Costs vs Petrol

Here's where the Model 3 makes its strongest case. At 15,000km per year charging at home on off-peak electricity (~$0.30/kWh), you're looking at roughly $600-700 in annual electricity costs. A comparable petrol sedan like a Camry or Mazda6 would cost $2,200-2,700 in fuel over the same distance at current prices.

Servicing is minimal. No oil changes, no spark plugs, no timing belts. Tesla's service schedule is basically brake fluid every two years and cabin air filter annually. Budget $300-400 per year. A petrol equivalent is $600-900.

The one catch: tyres. The Model 3 Long Range weighs 1,747kg and wears through rubber faster than a lighter petrol car. Expect to spend $500-600 per year on amortised tyre costs. Still, the total running cost gap is substantial. you're saving $1,500-2,000 per year vs a comparable petrol sedan. That's $7,500-$10,000 over five years. Check out our EV vs Hybrid cost breakdown for a deeper dive.

Design: The Highland Facelift

The 2024 Highland update was the most significant visual change since the Model 3 launched. Up front, the old headlights were swapped for slimmer LED units with a continuous light bar across the bumper. It looks sharper and more premium than the pre-facelift car, which was starting to show its age against newer Chinese rivals.

The rear got new full-width tail lights that wrap around the boot lid. side on, the silhouette is almost unchanged, which is fine because the Model 3's proportions were always good. The drag coefficient sits at an incredibly low 0.219, making it one of the slipperiest production cars on the planet. That number matters. it's a big part of why the Model 3 is so efficient at highway speeds.

At 4,720mm long on a 2,875mm wheelbase, it's a mid-size sedan that parks like a compact thanks to tight overhangs and a reasonable 11.6-metre turning circle. It'll fit in most Australian garage spaces without drama.

Colour options are limited (this is Tesla, after all), and anything other than white costs extra. The new Ultra Red and Quicksilver metallics look fantastic in person but add $2,000-$3,000 to the price.

Interior: Minimalism, For Better or Worse

You either love this interior or you don't. There's no instrument cluster, no physical buttons for climate, and no traditional gear selector. Everything runs through the 15.4-inch centre touchscreen. The Highland update added an 8-inch rear screen for backseat passengers, ambient lighting that wraps around the cabin, and better material quality on the dashboard and door cards. It feels noticeably more premium than the pre-facelift car.

The screen itself is responsive and the software is still the best in the business. Over-the-air updates mean you're getting new features every few months without visiting a dealer. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are still absent. Tesla insists you use their native apps. If that's a dealbreaker, note it now.

Material quality has improved with the Highland. The dash topper is a softer-touch material, the door inserts are better padded, and the new steering wheel has a more comfortable rim. But compared to something like a Polestar 2 or Ioniq 6, it still feels a touch sparse. There's a deliberate lack of visual noise in here. some people find it calming, others find it sterile.

Storage is decent. The centre console has a generous covered bin, there's a wireless charging pad for two phones, and the glovebox opens via the touchscreen (which is mildly annoying every single time). Cup holders are where you'd expect them.

Practicality: Bigger Than You Think

The headline number is 682 litres of boot space. That's enormous for a sedan. bigger than most mid-size SUVs. The boot opening is wide and the floor is flat, so loading bulky items is straightforward. There's also a 88-litre front trunk (frunk) where the engine would normally be, which is perfect for groceries, a gym bag, or keeping valuables hidden.

Rear seat legroom is good for two adults. Three across is tight, but manageable for shorter trips. The flat floor (no transmission tunnel) means the middle seat passenger actually has somewhere to put their feet, which is a genuine advantage over ICE sedans.

For families, there are ISOFIX anchor points on the two outer rear seats. Fitting child seats is straightforward. the wide rear doors open to a good angle, so you're not awkwardly wrestling a capsule into position like you are in some coupes. Two child seats fit comfortably with room for an adult in the middle, though it's snug.

The 2,875mm wheelbase translates to a genuinely spacious rear cabin. On a Sydney-to-Canberra run, rear passengers won't complain. That said, headroom is tighter than an SUV due to the sloping roofline. anyone over 185cm will notice.

Driving: The Bit Tesla Gets Right

Start with the acceleration. The Long Range produces 239kW and 340Nm of instantly available torque. Tesla doesn't quote an official 0-100km/h time for the Long Range, but independent tests consistently put it around 4.8-5.0 seconds. For context, that's quicker than a Golf GTI. From a car that makes no noise doing it.

But straight-line speed isn't really the point here. What makes the Model 3 genuinely enjoyable to drive daily is the smoothness. There's no gearbox hunting for the right ratio, no turbo lag, no delay between pressing the accelerator and the car responding. The power delivery is linear and immediate. Overtaking on country roads feels effortless.

The steering is well-weighted and accurate. It's not BMW-sharp, but it's better than most EVs. The low centre of gravity (the battery pack sits under the floor) means body roll is minimal and the car feels planted through corners. It's a genuinely engaging car to punt along a twisty road.

Ride comfort was improved significantly with the Highland update. The new adaptive dampers smooth out most bumps, but Australian roads are notoriously rough and the 18-inch wheels on the Long Range don't hide everything. Expansion joints on highways produce a noticeable thud. It's not uncomfortable, but it's not Camry-smooth either.

Road noise is the Model 3's one weak spot in the driving experience. Wind noise is excellent thanks to that 0.219 Cd, but tyre roar on coarse-chip Australian bitumen is pronounced, especially above 90km/h. The Highland added more sound deadening, and it's better than the old model, but the BYD Seal and Ioniq 6 are both quieter at highway speed.

One-pedal driving works brilliantly. Lift off the accelerator and regenerative braking slows the car smoothly enough that you rarely need the brake pedal in urban driving. Most owners adapt within a day and never want to go back. It also reduces brake wear dramatically, so your brake pads could last the life of the car.

Efficiency and Range: The Model 3's Party Trick

This is where the Long Range variant justifies its existence. The 77.8kWh battery delivers a WLTP-rated 750km of range. That's the longest range of any Tesla, and one of the longest of any EV at any price in Australia.

Now, WLTP figures are tested under laboratory conditions. You won't get 750km in the real world unless you're driving at 50km/h with the aircon off. Here's what you'll actually see:

  • Urban driving (30-60km/h): 130-140 Wh/km, translating to around 550-600km real range
  • Suburban mixed (60-80km/h): 140-155 Wh/km, giving you 500-555km
  • Highway cruising (100-110km/h): 160-180 Wh/km, delivering 430-490km
  • Highway fast (120km/h+): 190-210 Wh/km, reducing range to 370-410km

Even at the worst-case highway figure, 370km is enough to get from Sydney to Canberra with plenty to spare, or Melbourne to the Mornington Peninsula and back several times over. For the daily commute (average Australian drives 35km/day), you're charging once a week at most.

In summer with the aircon blasting, knock 10-15% off those numbers. In mild autumn and spring conditions, you'll beat them. The Model 3's heat pump (standard on all Highland variants) is significantly more efficient than the old resistive heater, so winter range loss is less severe than pre-2024 models.

Charging

The Long Range supports up to 250kW DC charging on Tesla Superchargers. In practice, you'll see peak rates of 230-250kW when the battery is between 5-30%, tapering down as it fills. A 10-80% charge takes approximately 25 minutes on a V3 Supercharger. That's a coffee stop, not a lunch stop.

Tesla's Supercharger network is the best-maintained fast-charging network in Australia. Coverage along the east coast is solid, with stations every 150-250km on major routes. It's also now open to non-Tesla vehicles at many locations, though Tesla owners still get priority pricing.

At home on a 7kW wall charger, a full charge takes about 11 hours. plug in at 9pm, wake up to a full battery. On a standard household powerpoint (2.3kW), it takes 33+ hours. a wall charger ($1,200-1,800 installed) is basically essential. For more detail on charging options, read our complete EV charging guide.

Safety: Five Stars, No Compromises

The Model 3 holds a 5-star ANCAP safety rating, which maps to the Euro NCAP assessment. The structural rigidity of the battery skateboard platform means it performs exceptionally well in crash tests. the rigid battery casing acts as a reinforcement layer across the entire floor of the car.

Standard active safety features include:

  • Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB) with pedestrian and cyclist detection
  • Lane Keep Assist and lane departure warning
  • Adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go capability
  • Blind spot monitoring via cameras (displayed on the touchscreen)
  • 8 external cameras providing 360-degree visibility
  • Sentry Mode that records activity around the parked car
  • Speed Assist using camera-based sign recognition

Tesla's Autopilot (standard on all variants) handles adaptive cruise and lane centring on highways. It works well on Australian motorways, though it can get confused on roads with faded lane markings. the system is one of the more capable lane-keeping assists on the market, but you absolutely cannot take your hands off the wheel and zone out. It's a driver assist, not a self-driving system.

Eight airbags are standard across the range, including front knee airbags and a far-side airbag. All five seats have three-point seatbelts with pretensioners. The car's low centre of gravity also makes it extremely resistant to rollover incidents.

Rivals: What Else Should You Cross-Shop?

BYD Seal (from $47,388)

The Seal is the value play. For about $14,500 less than the Model 3 Long Range, you get 570km WLTP range, a gorgeous interior with physical climate controls, and BYD's 6-year warranty. The Seal drives well and the Blade Battery is proven safe. Where it falls short: DC charging tops out at 150kW (vs 250kW), the infotainment software isn't as polished, and the Supercharger network isn't available. For city-focused buyers who don't do long road trips, the Seal is arguably the smarter purchase.

Hyundai Ioniq 6 (from $74,000)

The Ioniq 6 is more expensive but brings 800V architecture. that means 350kW charging capability and 10-80% in just 18 minutes on a compatible charger. It's also the quieter, more comfortable car. better sound insulation, softer ride, and a more conventional dashboard layout. Range is 614km WLTP on the Long Range. The Hyundai dealer network is broader than Tesla's service centre coverage, which matters in regional areas. Full comparison in our Model 3 vs Ioniq 6 head-to-head.

Polestar 2 (from $59,990)

The Polestar 2 is the driver's choice. Swedish-designed, built on Volvo's platform, with the most premium interior in this segment. The materials, the design language, the build quality. it feels expensive in a way the Tesla doesn't. Range is 554km WLTP for the Long Range Single Motor. It's not as efficient as the Model 3 and the charging network reliance on third-party providers is a drawback, but if you value driving feel and interior quality above all else, test drive one.

SpecModel 3 LRBYD SealIoniq 6 LRPolestar 2 LR
Price (RRP)$61,900$47,388$74,000$59,990
WLTP Range750km570km614km554km
Max DC Charge250kW150kW350kW205kW
Power239kW230kW168kW220kW
Boot Space682L402L401L405L
Weight1,747kg1,885kg1,905kg2,023kg
Warranty5yr / unlim6yr / unlim5yr / unlim5yr / unlim
ANCAP5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars

Should You Buy the Tesla Model 3 Long Range?

Yes, if:

  • You want the longest real-world range of any sub-$70k EV in Australia
  • You regularly drive long distances and value the Supercharger network
  • You can charge at home (this is critical for any EV, but especially for maximising the Model 3's cost advantage)
  • You want the most cargo space in this class. 682L is unmatched among electric sedans
  • Low running costs are a priority. under $700/year on electricity at home rates
  • You're comfortable with a fully screen-based interior

Maybe not, if:

  • You want a conventional cabin with physical buttons and a driver's instrument cluster
  • You prioritise interior luxury and build quality above all else (look at the Polestar 2)
  • You're on a tight budget (the BYD Seal delivers 80% of the experience for $14,500 less)
  • You can't charge at home. relying solely on public charging erodes the cost advantage significantly
  • You need a car for heavy highway use where tyre noise sensitivity is high

The Model 3 Long Range at $61,900 sits in a competitive part of the market, but it's competitive for a reason. 750km of WLTP range, a 77.8kWh battery, 250kW Supercharger access, a 682-litre boot, 5-star ANCAP, 5-year unlimited-km warranty, and annual running costs that make petrol cars look financially reckless. It's not the cheapest EV. It's not the most luxurious. But for the all-round package of range, efficiency, tech, practicality, and charging infrastructure, nothing else in Australia matches it at this price.

If you're cross-shopping, start with our Model 3 vs Ioniq 6 and Dolphin vs Model 3 head-to-head comparisons. Or browse the full best electric cars in Australia list to see where it ranks against every EV on sale.

→ Compare all Tesla Model 3 variants on CarSorted (200+ specs)

Compare these cars yourself

200+ specs, fuel costs, safety ratings, braking distance, and speed vs range calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Tesla Model 3 cost in Australia?
The Tesla Model 3 range starts at $54,900 for the Standard Range RWD, $61,900 for the Long Range RWD, and $72,900 for the Performance AWD. Driveaway prices add roughly $2,000-4,000 depending on your state.
What is the real-world range of the Tesla Model 3 Long Range?
The WLTP rating is 750km, but real-world range is typically 550-620km in mixed driving. At a constant 110km/h on the highway, expect around 480-520km. Cold weather, air conditioning, and high speeds reduce range further.
How long does it take to charge a Tesla Model 3?
On a Tesla Supercharger (250kW), the Long Range charges from 10-80% in approximately 25 minutes. On a home wall charger (7kW), a full charge takes about 11 hours overnight. Standard household powerpoint (2.3kW) takes over 30 hours.
Is the Tesla Model 3 a good family car?
Yes. The Model 3 has a 682-litre boot (larger than most mid-size sedans), ISOFIX points in the rear, a 5-star ANCAP safety rating, and enough rear legroom for two child seats. The flat floor and lack of a transmission tunnel make the rear seat more usable than many rivals.
What warranty does Tesla offer in Australia?
Tesla offers a 5-year, unlimited-kilometre vehicle warranty. The battery and drive unit are covered for 8 years or 160,000km (Standard Range) or 192,000km (Long Range and Performance), whichever comes first.
How does the Tesla Model 3 compare to the BYD Seal?
The BYD Seal is roughly $14,500 cheaper for comparable range and offers a 6-year warranty. The Model 3 Long Range has superior highway efficiency, access to the Supercharger network, and a longer WLTP range (750km vs 570km). The Seal has a more traditional interior layout.

Disclaimer: All information in this article was believed to be correct at the time of publishing (7 April 2026). Prices are manufacturer recommended retail prices (RRP) and may vary by state, dealer, and options. Specifications, government incentives, and rebates can change without notice. Always verify details with the manufacturer or relevant authority before making a purchase decision. Running cost estimates are based on average Australian driving conditions at 15,000 km/year. All opinions are editorial and independent. CarSorted does not accept payment for recommendations or rankings.

Written by Uzzi, CarSorted Editorial Team · 7 April 2026

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