Site Review Scores

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Meijer – Northville

Introduction

Trip to visit all the southern lower Michigan Tesla Supercharger sites open to non-Telsa vehicles.  Site visit on July 21, 2025.


Business/Location Name

Meijer

Address

20401 Haggerty Rd, Northville, MI 48167

Network

Tesla

Station Details

12 Stalls (3 sets of 4 dispensers, total 750kW site power)

Cost

$0.53/kWh (8am to 11pm) $0.28/kWh off peak; $0.38/$0.21 per kWh for membership


The Meijer in Northville station was the last charging stop on my trip to check the southern lower Michigan Tesla sites.  A standard 12 stall layout with connection points on either side of the row of parking.  Based on the usage chart in the Tesla app, this site sees some of the heaviest use amongst the Michigan sites, but still maintains some stall availability throughout the day.  (This station opened in May 2022).  



Accessibility

This Meijer site is in the parking lot to the north, next to the garden center area.  The site is 0.4 miles from I-275 at exit 167.  The charge points are easy to spot in the parking lot.  There are six stalls on either side of a row of parking that support this location.  There is no accessible specific parking, nor is there any pull-through spots that allow easy charging while towing.



Amenities

Dining options include: Five Guys, Qdoba, Chick-fil-A, Wingstop, Thai Fresh, Mission BBQ, Panera, Starbucks

Shopping options include: Meijer, Kohl’s

Car-related services (windshield cleaning, air):  Meijer gas station in same parking lot


Concentration

This is a standard 12 stall V3 location.  The dispensers are arranged in the middle of a row of perpendicular parking, with the center of the layout on one side taken up by the power cabinets and the transformer.  There are several end dispensers that can support alternate parking arrangements for vehicles whose charge port locations don’t work the best with the short V3 dispenser cables.



Location

This site is placed along the I-275/96 route.  This site supports the northwest suburbs and is combined with the older V2 site in Livonia provides charging to those living in the area without access to home charging.  About 30 miles to Detroit and 70 miles to Lansing, it can also support interstate travel plans.


50 Mile Loop:


100 to 150 Mile Range Estimate:



Speed

The currently installed V3 power cabinets can produce up to 500V and 600A.  The power cabinets are connected by the high voltage DC bus, and thus can share power amongst all the dispensers.  Of course, this 500V limitation reduces the peak charging speeds for some 800V architecture vehicles, but the 600A output works well for lower voltage higher amperage vehicles.  Since I am on this trip with Elektra, the 200A, 80kW limit of the vehicle will not be stressing these units at all.  Possibly in anticipation of the level of usage of this site, there is a 1000 kVA transformer here, making this one of a few sites in Michigan with this much power provided.



Summary

As my research indicated this was possibly the busiest site of the trip.  During my quick stop there were between 7 and 9 vehicles charging the whole time.  This included a Cadillac Optix that started to charge as I was leaving.  This site was also the first time on the trip that I came across an individual stall listed as out of order.  In this case the stall on the end 2D was listed as out of order.  Unfortunately, this is one of the stalls that supports alternate parking arrangements for vehicles that can’t easily connect to the short V3 cables.



What I paid for this stop:

Total Cost: $2.01

Total kWh: 5.3002 kWh

Time: 6 min

Average Charge Speed: 53 kW

Cost per kWh: $0.38

(63% to 70%)


Total Score (Max 44)

Score

Accessibility

Amenities

Usability

38

A

5

8

25


Alternatives:

Embassy Suites – 19525 Victor Pkwy, Livonia, MI 48152 - $0.55/kWh + $0.50 connection – 60kW x 2 (Red E Charge)

Amoco – 22145 Farmington Rd, Farmington 48336 - $0.40/min + $1.00 connection – 62kW x 2

(ChargePoint)


Questions or Comments:

dantheevman@gmail.com


Saturday, November 15, 2025

Meijer – Brighton

Introduction

Trip to visit all the southern lower Michigan Tesla Supercharger sites open to non-Tesla vehicles.  Site visit on July 21, 2025.


Business/Location Name

Meijer

Address

8650 W Grand River Ave, Brighton, MI 48116

Network

Tesla

Station Details

12 Stalls (3 sets of 4 dispensers, total 750kW site power)

Cost

$0.49 per kWh, $0.37 per kWh for membership


The Meijer in Brighton station was the 12th charging stop on my trip to check the southern lower Michigan Tesla sites.  This is one of the newest sites, and thus is supporting the V3.5 hardware.  Based on the usage chart in the Tesla app, this site sees steady use but is not overly busy.  (This station opened in February 2025).  




Accessibility

This Meijer site is in the parking lot of the superstore business.  The site is 0.7 miles from I-96 at exit 145.  South from the exit on the north edge of the large parking lot.  The charge points are easy to locate once you have navigated to the Meijer parking lot.  The stalls are arranged along the outer edge of the parking lot near the garden center.  The western most dispenser is placed with accessibility in mind.  There is no pull-though spot at this location.




Amenities

Dining options include: Wendy’s, Red Robin, Single Barrel Social, Olga’s Kitchen, McDonald’s, Chipotle

Shopping options include: Meijer

Car-related services (windshield cleaning, air):  Meijer gas station in same parking lot


Concentration

This is a standard 12 stall V3.5 location.  The dispensers are arranged along the outer edge of the parking lot.  The power cabinets and transformer are placed at the end of the row of dispensers.  The 12 stalls are using the newer V4 cabinets that have the longer cables, thus eliminating most parking concerns for vehicles that don’t follow the Tesla charging port location practice.



Location

This site supports I-96 east/west interstate and the US-23 north/south highway.  About 50 miles to Detroit and 50 miles to Lansing, this is about the mid-point between these 2 cities east to west across the state.  Flint is 40 miles to the north and the Ohio boarder is 70 miles to the south.


50 Mile Loop:


100 to 150 Mile Range Estimate:


Speed

The currently installed V3 power cabinets can produce up to 500V and 600A.  The power cabinets are connected by the high voltage DC bus, and thus can share power amongst all the dispensers.  Of course, this 500V limitation reduces the peak charging speeds for some 800V architecture vehicles, but the 600A output works well for lower voltage higher amperage vehicles.  Since I am on this trip with Elektra, the 200A, 80kW limit of the vehicle will not be stressing these units at all.  Certainly seems that Tesla has selected 750 kVA transformers as the sweet spot for powering their sites.



Summary

At this stop there were 4 cars charging.  In addition to my car, there were 2 Model Y and one classic looking Model S.  This site was a long time coming with the equipment ready to go at least 3 months before the power company transformer showed up.  




What I paid for this stop:

Total Cost: $4.53

Total kWh: 12.2534 kWh

Time: 12 minutes

Average Charge Speed: 61.3 kW

Cost per kWh: $0.37

(55% -> 70%)



Total Score (Max 44)

Score

Accessibility

Amenities

Usability

37

A

5

7

25


Alternatives:

Shell – 8281 Grand River Ave, Brighton, MI 48114 - $0.50/kWh(+$1.00) – 160kW x 4

(Red E Charge)

BP – 204 W Grand River Ave, Brighton, MI 48116 - $0.48/kWh(6% tax) – 125kW x 2

(ChargePoint)


Questions or Comments:

dantheevman@gmail.com


Saturday, November 8, 2025

Meijer – Lansing

Introduction

Trip to visit all the southern lower Michigan Tesla Supercharger sites open to non-Tesla vehicles.  Site visit on July 21, 2025.


Business/Location Name

Meijer

Address

6200 S Pennsylvania Ave, Lansing, MI 48911

Network

Tesla

Station Details

12 Stalls (3 sets of 4 dispensers, total 750kW site power)

Cost

$0.47 per kWh, $0.36 per kWh for membership


The Meijer in Lansing station was the 11th charging stop on my trip to check the southern lower Michigan Tesla sites.  I have been to this location before to complete a site visit on the co-located Rivian chargers, which were the first NEVI funded chargers to open in Michigan.  Based on the usage chart in the Tesla app, this site sees steady use but is not overly busy.  (This station opened in November 2022).  




Accessibility

This Meijer site is in the parking lot of the superstore business.  The site is 0.2 miles from I-96 at exit 104.  North from the exit in the middle of the large parking lot.  The charge points are easy to locate once you have navigated to the Meijer parking lot.  The stalls are in the middle of one perpendicular parking row.  No pull through parking.




Amenities

Dining options include: Panda Express, Biggby Coffee, Culver’s, Happy’s Pizza

Shopping options include: Meijer

Car-related services (windshield cleaning, air):  Meijer gas station in same parking lot


Concentration

This is a standard 12 stall V3 location.  The dispensers are arranged in the middle of a row of perpendicular parking, with the center of the layout on one side taken up by the power cabinets and the transformer.  There are several end dispensers that can support alternate parking arrangements for vehicles whose charge port locations don’t work the best with the short V3 dispenser cables.



Location

This site supports I-96 east/west interstate and the US-127 north/south highway.  At about 90 miles to Detroit and 115 miles to Muskegon, this is about the mid-point between these 2 cities east to west across the state.  Grayling is 150 miles to the north and Fort Wayne, IN is 140 miles to the south.


50 Mile Loop:


100 to 150 Mile Range Estimate:


Speed

The currently installed V3 power cabinets can produce up to 500V and 600A.  The power cabinets are connected by the high voltage DC bus, and thus can share power amongst all the dispensers.  Of course, this 500V limitation reduces the peak charging speeds for some 800V architecture vehicles, but the 600A output works well for lower voltage higher amperage vehicles.  Since I am on this trip with Elektra, the 200A, 80kW limit of the vehicle will not be stressing these units at all.  Another site with a 750 kVA transformer matching the site power needs.


Summary

I arrived at this site at the busy evening rush time.  There were quite a few cars already charging, and here I was happy to have Elektra and the front charge port so that I didn’t have to deal with any strange parking to get connected.  At any point in time there were between 5 and 8 vehicles all charging at this site at the same time.  I made this a longer stop so that I could grab some Panda Express to fuel myself.  I also checked on the Rivian chargers, which last time I was at the site were more expensive than the Tesla site.  Rivian did put in time of use pricing and move the costs down to be closer to the Tesla price, to the point they might be cheaper than the non-membership rate, at lease for Rivian drivers.


(Rivian NEVI site with updated pricing, and the first stall shown as out of order.)


What I paid for this stop:

Total Cost: $7.71

Total kWh: 21.4284 kWh

Time: 20 min

Average Charge Speed: 64.3 kW

Cost per kWh: $0.36/kWh



Total Score (Max 44)

Score

Accessibility

Amenities

Usability

37

A

6

6

25


Alternatives:

Meijer – 6200 S Pennsylvania Ave, Lansing, MI 48911- $0.45/kWh – 300kW x 6

(Rivian)

Park – 2074 N Aurelius Rd, Holt, MI 48842 - $0.26/min (6% tax) – 62kW x 2

(ChargePoint)


Questions or Comments:

dantheevman@gmail.com


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