What drives the variation
Battery usage in Tesla Camp Mode depends almost entirely on outside temperature and how hard the HVAC has to work. At a comfortable 15°C (60°F), the climate cycles intermittently and you'll lose roughly 1% per hour. At -5°C (23°F), continuous heat pump operation pushes that to 3% per hour. Heat costs more than cooling because the heat pump efficiency drops as temperature falls.
Other factors are negligible: cabin lights, screens at low brightness, and music collectively use under 100W. The HVAC system is the variable that matters.
Real measurements from logged Tesla camping nights
- Summer mild (20°C): 8-10% over 8 hours
- Spring/fall (10°C): 12-15% over 8 hours
- Cold (0°C): 18-22% over 8 hours
- Sub-freezing (-10°C): 22-30% over 8 hours
How to maximize range during camping
Pre-cool or pre-heat the cabin while on shore power before disconnecting. Use a high-quality insulated mattress (foam beats air for cold nights). Add reflective window covers — they reduce radiative heat loss by up to 25%. Wear appropriate sleepwear so you can lower the cabin set point. Many campers run Camp Mode at 16°C (60°F) instead of 21°C and barely notice the difference under a sleeping bag.
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