Tesla has long stood apart from the rest of the automotive world by refusing to support Apple CarPlay or Android Auto. But that may finally be changing. A new report claims Tesla is internally testing CarPlay integration, suggesting the company might soon cave to a feature many buyers now consider essential.
Tesla CarPlay support reportedly in the testing phase

According to Bloomberg sources, Tesla has begun internal discussions and test builds that include basic CarPlay functionality. While nothing has been confirmed publicly, the timing aligns with Tesla’s growing focus on boosting EV sales during a more competitive market cycle.
Unlike most automakers, Tesla has always leaned on its proprietary software interface. But as more drivers voice frustration over the lack of smartphone projection options, the company appears to be exploring what once seemed off the table.
CarPlay rollout timeline still uncertain
Even if testing is underway, that doesn’t mean the feature is guaranteed to launch. Tesla has a long history of testing features without releasing them, and CarPlay could join that list. The report claims Tesla would likely support standard CarPlay, not the full-screen CarPlay Ultra that Apple introduced recently. Instead, Tesla may opt for a windowed implementation within its existing UI.
This approach would technically check the box without overhauling Tesla’s software design philosophy. But it might not satisfy those hoping for a clean, integrated CarPlay experience.
Tesla CarPlay demand keeps growing
The absence of CarPlay has become a sticking point for many EV shoppers. Across user forums, potential buyers say CarPlay support is a dealbreaker especially when rivals already include it by default. Tesla’s resistance has increasingly felt like a self-inflicted wound as competitors lean into seamless smartphone integration.
Just look at GM, which ditched CarPlay in favor of its own infotainment system and faced heavy backlash for the decision. The message from consumers is clear: phone projection matters.
Why Tesla might change course
So why now? Several factors could be pushing Tesla toward adoption:
- Increased market competition
- Slowing EV growth in key regions
- Customer retention tied to daily convenience features
- CarPlay becoming an expected standard, not a luxury
If Tesla adds CarPlay, even in a limited form, it could signal a shift in how the company handles third-party ecosystems, something it’s resisted for years.
No promises yet, but pressure is mounting
For now, there’s no official word. No demo. No public beta. Just whispers from inside the company. But those whispers may grow louder if Tesla sees potential gains in buyer interest. CarPlay support might not move the needle for hardcore fans, but it could help win over the hesitant buyer standing between a Model Y and a CarPlay-equipped rival.
Until then, Tesla owners and would-be buyers are left waiting. Maybe the holdout ends. Or maybe, like so many other Tesla features, it stays locked in the lab.

