WattCabin

New Tesla? 9 Accessories to Buy First

WattCabin · 9 min read · Updated May 2026

A new Tesla ships nearly bare inside, and the first rainy week or hot afternoon makes the gaps obvious fast. These are the nine accessories we would order before the car even reaches the driveway, in rough priority order. Most are cheap, all of them earn their place, and a few like a proper home charger genuinely change how you live with the car. Start with 3D MAXpider KAGU All-Weather Floor Mats and a Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display) and work down from there.

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1. All-weather floor mats

The factory carpet mats look fine in the showroom and terrible after one wet week. All-weather mats are the single most-recommended first buy in every Tesla owner group, because road grime grinds into carpet permanently but wipes off a rubber liner in seconds.

For a Model 3 or Model Y, the community default is the 3D MAXpider KAGU set , which uses a laser-scanned fit and a raised carpet-fiber top that traps water. If you live in snow or mud country and care more about capacity than looks, BASENOR 3D All-Weather Floor Liners have deeper channels and taller lips for less money. Want the trunk and rear done in one matched box too? Look at Tesmanian All-Weather Floor Mat Full Set .

Whatever you pick, confirm the model year. The 2025 to 2026 Juniper Model Y and Highland Model 3 have redesigned footwells, so a legacy set will not sit right.

3D MAXpider KAGU All-Weather Floor Mats
4.7 floor mats

3D MAXpider KAGU All-Weather Floor Mats

The Tesla-forum default pick, triple-layer all-weather mats with a precision laser-scanned fit and grippy non-slip backing.

$130–$190 Check Price
BASENOR 3D All-Weather Floor Liners
4.4 floor mats

BASENOR 3D All-Weather Floor Liners

Heavy-duty waterproof liners with deep channels and tall lips that swallow a surprising amount of slush and sand.

$90–$130 Check Price

2. A screen protector for the center display

That center touchscreen is the most-touched surface in the car and a fingerprint magnet under direct sun. A matte tempered-glass protector kills glare and smudges without adding noticeable touch lag.

The Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display) is the easy-install benchmark thanks to its alignment tray, which makes a bubble-free application almost foolproof. If you would rather keep the display razor sharp and can live with more glare, Abstract Ocean Tempered Glass Screen Protector offers a clear-glass option instead of matte. Owners of newer cars with the rear display should add Spigen GLAStR Slim Anti-Glare (Rear Screen) while they are at it.

Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display)
4.6 screen protectors

Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display)

The easy-install benchmark, 9H tempered glass with an alignment tray and matte anti-glare, anti-fingerprint finish.

$25–$40 Check Price
Spigen GLAStR Slim Anti-Glare (Rear Screen)
4.5 screen protectors

Spigen GLAStR Slim Anti-Glare (Rear Screen)

Rear-touchscreen protection for Highland Model 3 and Juniper Model Y with the same 9H matte glass.

$20–$30 Check Price

3. A glass-roof sunshade

Tesla glass roofs let in a lot of heat and UV, and in a hot climate this is the biggest comfort upgrade you can make. A good shade meaningfully drops cabin temperature and stops the interior baking.

For maximum heat rejection, VION Glass Roof Sunshade blocks roughly 95 percent of UV with multi-layer insulation. If you want the fastest possible in-and-out, Tesery Dual-Layer Glass Roof Sunshade snaps in tool-free with a reflective honeycomb layer. Prefer diffused light and an airy factory look over absolute heat blocking? The OEM-Style Mesh Glass Roof Sunshade is the lighter, cheaper choice.

VION Glass Roof Sunshade
4.5 sunshades

VION Glass Roof Sunshade

UPF 50+ shade blocking 95% of UV with multi-layer insulation that meaningfully drops cabin heat.

$60–$110 Check Price
Tesery Dual-Layer Glass Roof Sunshade
4.4 sunshades

Tesery Dual-Layer Glass Roof Sunshade

Honeycomb reflective outer layer bounces infrared and UV away; tool-free, adhesive-free install in minutes.

$50–$90 Check Price

4. Center console organizers

The stock console is a cavernous bin with rattly cupholders. A set of TPU or silicone organizers tames it and silences the rattle that drives owners crazy on rough roads.

On a Highland Model 3 or Juniper Model Y, the BASENOR 4PCS TPU Center Console Organizer Set won head-to-head fitment with a tight 0.3mm tolerance and covers cupholder to armrest in one box. If your only gripe is sliding cups, the cheap Abstract Ocean Cup Holder Insert (2nd Gen Console) is a targeted fix, and Tesery Center Console Organizer Set is a solid grippy runner-up.

BASENOR 4PCS TPU Center Console Organizer Set
4.8 console organizers

BASENOR 4PCS TPU Center Console Organizer Set

Tested-winner for Highland/Juniper, dual-layer TPU with a 0.3mm precision fit, cupholder to armrest in one box.

$25–$40 Check Price
Tesery Center Console Organizer Set
4.3 console organizers

Tesery Center Console Organizer Set

Multi-piece organizer with non-slip silicone mats and tuned tolerances that avoid both rattle and stuck pieces.

$20–$35 Check Price

5. A real home charger

The included mobile connector works, but a wall-mounted Level 2 charger is faster, tidier, and the upgrade you will appreciate every single morning. The Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) delivers up to 11.5 kW with Wi-Fi monitoring and native cable management.

It needs a licensed electrician and a 60A circuit, so budget for install. If a permanent charger is not in the cards yet, at least add a TOPABYTE Charging Cable Organizer Wall Mount so the mobile cable stays coiled and off the garage floor.

Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)
4.7 charging

Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)

The official Level 2 home charger delivering up to 11.5 kW with Wi-Fi monitoring and a tidy wall-mounted cable.

$400–$475 Check Price
TOPABYTE Charging Cable Organizer Wall Mount
4.5 charging

TOPABYTE Charging Cable Organizer Wall Mount

Wall-mounted holder that coils the mobile connector and cable neatly and stores the adapter heads in one spot.

$20–$35 Check Price

6. A public-charging adapter

Superchargers are great until you are at a hotel or workplace that only has a J1772 Level 2 station. A compact Lectron J1772 to Tesla Charging Adapter unlocks that huge public network and lives easily in the frunk.

For longer trips into areas where Superchargers are sparse, a Lectron CCS to Tesla DC Fast Charging Adapter adds CCS DC fast-charging stations to your route options, as long as your vehicle is CCS-retrofit compatible.

Lectron J1772 to Tesla Charging Adapter
4.6 charging

Lectron J1772 to Tesla Charging Adapter

Compact adapter that unlocks public J1772 Level 2 stations for any Tesla, rated to 48A.

$130–$160 Check Price

7. Trunk and frunk organization

Both cargo areas are big open wells where groceries slide everywhere. A BASENOR Collapsible Trunk Storage Bin corrals loose gear and folds flat when you do not need it, and it fits every Tesla trunk.

Model Y owners should grab the TOPABYTE Frunk Storage Organizer (Model Y) to divide the front trunk into real compartments, and Model 3 owners can reclaim the hidden lower well with the TOPABYTE Under-Trunk Storage Organizer (Model 3) . A pair of fold-down grocery hooks finally keeps bags upright on the drive home.

TOPABYTE Frunk Storage Organizer (Model Y)
4.6 trunk storage

TOPABYTE Frunk Storage Organizer (Model Y)

Molded frunk insert that turns the open front-trunk well into divided, non-slip compartments.

$35–$55 Check Price
BASENOR Collapsible Trunk Storage Bin
4.5 trunk storage

BASENOR Collapsible Trunk Storage Bin

Foldable fabric bin with rigid sides and handles that contains groceries and gear, then folds flat when unused.

$25–$40 Check Price

8. Mud flaps

EVs kick up a lot of road spray, and that spray accelerates corrosion on rocker panels and tie rods. No-drill mud flaps bolt to factory points in minutes and pay for themselves in protected paint.

For a Juniper Model Y, the BASENOR No-Drill Mud Flaps (Model Y Juniper) are laser-scanned to the new mounting points. Pre-2025 Model Y owners want the BASENOR Mud Flaps (2020–2024 Model Y) instead, and Model 3 owners can use the Tesloid Splash Guards (Model 3) .

9. Microfiber detailing towels

The glossy piano-black trim and the touchscreen show every smudge. A cheap pack of scratch-free microfiber towels is the last small essential, lint-free and safe on every interior surface. It is the kind of five-dollar buy you will reach for weekly.

Featured in this guide

3D MAXpider KAGU All-Weather Floor Mats
4.7 floor mats

3D MAXpider KAGU All-Weather Floor Mats

The Tesla-forum default pick, triple-layer all-weather mats with a precision laser-scanned fit and grippy non-slip backing.

$130–$190 Check Price
Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display)
4.6 screen protectors

Spigen GLAStR EZ FIT Tempered Glass (Center Display)

The easy-install benchmark, 9H tempered glass with an alignment tray and matte anti-glare, anti-fingerprint finish.

$25–$40 Check Price
VION Glass Roof Sunshade
4.5 sunshades

VION Glass Roof Sunshade

UPF 50+ shade blocking 95% of UV with multi-layer insulation that meaningfully drops cabin heat.

$60–$110 Check Price
BASENOR 4PCS TPU Center Console Organizer Set
4.8 console organizers

BASENOR 4PCS TPU Center Console Organizer Set

Tested-winner for Highland/Juniper, dual-layer TPU with a 0.3mm precision fit, cupholder to armrest in one box.

$25–$40 Check Price
Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)
4.7 charging

Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)

The official Level 2 home charger delivering up to 11.5 kW with Wi-Fi monitoring and a tidy wall-mounted cable.

$400–$475 Check Price