Helper library to authenticate to Tesla's API, enabling you to build apps that interact with Tesla's cars and energy products.
Works with both the (soon to be deprecated) Owner API, as well as the new Fleet API
This code was originally based on Christian P's work in the TeslaLogger tool.
Thanks also to Tim Dorr for his work in documenting the new API, and Ramon Smits for his contributions to this library.
The package is available via NuGet with the package name TeslaAuth.
Install-Package TeslaAuth
The library is compiled using .NET Standard 2.0, and can be used by any flavour of .NET that supports this, including .NET, .NET Core, .NET Framework, Mono, UWP and Xamarin.
This repo includes three samples:
- A WPF sample that demonstrates a native client authentication with an embedded iframe (only runs on Windows)
- A console app that launches the system browser to complete authentication - low tech but simple (should work across platforms)
- An ASP.NET Core app that demonstates web authentication (should work across platforms)
The WPF sample can be used with both the Owner API and the Fleet API. For the latter you need to supply your own Fleet API keys. You can use any Redirect URL (doesn't even need to be real)
The console and web sample only works with the Fleet API, and you need to supply yout own Fleet API keys. You must use a Redirect Redirect URL that matches the one configured for your app. For the Console sammple it doesn't matter what this is, but for the web sample it must the sample website's host, port and path.
To authenticate users for the Tesla API, you need to show the Tesla sign in UI in a browser (system or embedded). Once the user has authenticated, the tokens are posted back to your page or app.
The steps to use this library are:
- Initialise a
TeslaAuthHelper
instance - Call
authHelper.GetLoginUrlForBrowser()
to generate the login URL - Show the returned URL in the system browser or your app's integrated browser
- Monitor the browser until you see a request for a URL containing the your redirect URL, or if you're building a website, implement the logic directly on the redirect URL
- Grab the entire URL (it contains a query string) and pass it to
authHelper.GetTokenAfterLoginAsync(...)
- This will return a
Tokens
object containing an Access and Refresh token - When the token expires, call
authHelper.RefreshTokenAsync(...)
to get a new one without needing a complete login flow.
The Tesla Owner API is the unofficial API that has been used by third party Tesla apps until 2023. Anybody can use the API without registration, using a well-known Client ID coded into the TeslaAuth library. While this API is easiest to use, Tesla have announced it will stop working at some point in the future.
To use the Owner API, you can initialise a TeslaAuth
instance with the simple constructor (2 optional parameters).
The Fleet API is Tesla's new, officially supported API for third party developers. In order to use it, you need to first register for an account and then register an app to get a Client ID and other details. You must also complete additional onboarding steps as described at developer.tesla.com.
To use the Fleet API, you can initialise a TeslaAuth
instance passing the region
, clientId
, clientSecret
, redirectUri
and
scope
parameters.
The values you use must match the ones configured in the Tesla developer portal.
Once you have obtained a token from TeslaAuth, you can pass it to the Tesla Owner or Fleet API as a Bearer token in the Authorization
header. This library does not assist with calling the Tesla APIs; it's only for authentication.
Contributions to this library are welcome. If you want to show your appreciation you can also support me on Ko-Fi.