Most "best Tesla accessories" lists are written by people who never opened the box. This one is different in a boring way: it is simply everything I bought for my own Model Y and Model 3 over the last year, minus anything I regretted. Eleven items made the cut. One of them I liked enough to buy a second time when I changed cars, which is the only five-star review that actually means something.
One practical warning before the list: Tesla accessories are generation-specific. A 2024+ Model 3 Highland or 2025+ Model Y Juniper usually needs a different variant than a 2021 to 2023 car. Each link below opens an Amazon search for the exact product name, so pick the variant matching your car's year before you order.
The daily-use winners
1. Glove box USB hub / docking station (Leikaendi, 4-in-1)
The hidden USB port in the glove box is where your dashcam drive belongs, and this hub turns that one port into a small docking station: dashcam storage, a charger port, data transfer, and music storage in one place, out of sight. This is the item I bought twice: once for the 2021 to 2024 generation, and again in the 2024 to 2025 version when the newer car arrived. When an owner rebuys the same accessory for the next car, that tells you everything.
2. All-weather floor mats + boot liner set (3W, TPE)
Full TPE set: both rows plus the boot. Winter slush, bike trips, groceries; the mats take the abuse and rinse clean. If you buy one thing from this list for a new car, buy this before the first rainy week. Fit is model-and-year specific, so double-check the variant.
3. MagSafe phone holder with charging (Spigen)
Mounts without adhesive damage, holds any MagSafe phone, and charges while you drive. Sounds trivial until you try living with the phone loose in the console. Works with iPhone 12 through 16 and MagSafe-case Androids.
Protection basics
4. Screen protector for the display (Spigen Glas.tR)
The display is the one surface in a Tesla you touch every single drive. A tempered, anti-glare, anti-fingerprint layer costs little and keeps the panel pristine; mine has been on since autumn 2025 with zero bubbles or touch issues. Versions exist for the main screen and the 8-inch rear display of the newer cars.
5. Centre armrest cover (Spigen)
The armrest is the highest-wear soft surface in the cabin. A fitted cover protects it from a year of elbows and jeans rivets, and looks factory rather than aftermarket. Fitted mine to the Juniper armrest; still snug.
6. Camera lens covers (Spigen, carbon)
Two-pack of covers for the side repeater cameras. Cheap insurance for the cameras your Autopilot relies on, and the carbon look is subtle. Thirty-second install.
7. Pedal covers (GAFAT, silver)
Purely cosmetic honesty: the rubber factory pedals work fine. But the metal covers lift the footwell visually, install without drilling, and have not shifted a millimetre since fitting. Get the version for your generation.
Organisation and small comforts
8. Centre console organiser set (LANTU, 5 pieces)
The Tesla console is a big empty box; this silicone set divides it into trays, a hidden compartment, and a drink insert. Everything stops rattling and sliding. The kind of purchase you forget about because it just works, which is the point.
9. Sunglasses holder for the sun visor (Spigen, 2-pack)
Teslas famously have nowhere for sunglasses. This silicone clip on the visor fixes a small daily annoyance for a few euros. Two in the pack, one per visor or one for the second car.
10. Glove box hub, previous-generation version (Leikaendi)
Listed separately because fitment differs: this is the 2021 to 2024 Model Y / 2021 to 2023 Model 3 version of item 1. If you drive the pre-refresh generation, this is the variant you want; same functions, same out-of-sight tidiness.
The practical one most owners forget
11. Rubber jack pads (4-pack)
The unglamorous essential. Tesla battery packs run close to the jacking points, and lifting the car without pads risks expensive damage. A four-pack lives in my boot and comes out for every tyre change; any tyre shop will thank you, and some insist on them. If you rotate tyres seasonally in Europe, this is not optional equipment.
What I would buy first
| Priority | Item | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Day one | Floor mats + boot liner, screen protector | Wear protection on the two highest-contact surfaces |
| First week | Jack pads, glove box hub | The practical pair: safe lifting and a proper dashcam setup |
| When it annoys you | Organiser, glasses holder, phone mount | Comfort fixes for real daily frictions |
| Optional | Armrest cover, camera covers, pedal covers | Preservation and looks |
Related reading: what a Tesla actually costs to maintain in Europe and the July 2026 buyer check if you are still before the purchase.
FAQ
Do these fit every Tesla?
No. Most items are generation-specific: Highland and Juniper cars often need different variants than 2021 to 2023 cars. The links open Amazon searches for the exact product names so you can select your year's variant.
Were any of these sponsored or sent for free?
No. All eleven are from my own paid Amazon orders in 2025, and all are still in use. The links are affiliate links, disclosed at the top; they cost you nothing extra.
What did NOT make the list?
Anything I did not personally buy. This page will only ever grow when I actually buy and keep something new, which is also why it is short.