1. Vehicle & Drivetrain Benefits (2020 Long Range 4×4)

  • Dual Motor All-Wheel Drive (4×4) – Superior traction in rain, snow, and on slippery European roads.

  • Long Range EPA/WLTP – Approx. 560 km (348 miles) WLTP range; real-world ~480–520 km depending on driving.

  • Acceleration – 0–100 km/h in ~4.4 seconds (without Acceleration Boost upgrade; 4.0s with optional paid upgrade).

  • Premium Interior – 14-speaker immersive audio, premium heated seats (front & rear), heated steering wheel (added via OTA for some 2020 models), and fog lamps.

  • Hatchback-Like Boot – Large trunk + frunk, practical for EU road trips.


2. Full Self-Driving (FSD) Benefits – EU Specifics

⚠️ EU regulatory restrictions (UN-R79, UN-R157) significantly limit FSD features compared to the US. As of 2026, the following applies:

Included FSD Features (EU version – reduced vs. US)

 
 
FeatureStatus in EU (2020 vehicle with FSD)
Navigate on Autopilot (highway)✅ Yes – but requires driver confirmation for lane changes (no auto lane change without stalk confirmation)
Auto Lane Change⚠️ Only on highways, and only with driver initiation (stalk tap) – not fully automatic
Autopark (parallel/perpendicular)✅ Yes – works but slower than newer USS-equipped Teslas (2020 still has ultrasonic sensors)
Summon (Basic)✅ Yes – move car forward/backward via app
Smart Summon⚠️ Limited – often geofenced or disabled in public EU parking lots due to regulations
Traffic Light & Stop Sign Control✅ Yes – but requires driver confirmation (tap accelerator) at every green light/stop sign
Autosteer on City StreetsNot available in the EU – not approved by regulators for 2020 hardware; Tesla never released this functionality in the EU for HW3 vehicles

Key EU-Specific FSD Benefits (What you actually get)

  • Future OTA Potential – If EU regulations loosen (e.g., UN-R157 update), the 2020 car with HW3 could receive improved features, but no guarantees.

  • Highway Autopilot+ – Navigate on Autopilot handles lane keeping, speed adjustments, and interchanges, but lane changes require stalk confirmation.

  • Traffic Light Awareness – Visual/audible warning when light turns green; you still must confirm.

  • Enhanced Summon for tight EU parking spaces – Useful in narrow underground garages common in European cities.

What you do NOT get (compared to US FSD)

  • No unsupervised city driving.

  • No automatic lane changes without driver confirmation.

  • No roundabout handling (EU roundabouts are too complex for current regulatory approval).


3. Warranty & Battery Benefits (2020 EU Model)

  • Battery & Drive Unit Warranty – 8 years / 192,000 km (120,000 miles) – check exact expiry date (likely 2028 or 160k–192k km).

  • Minimum battery capacity retention – 70% within warranty period.

  • Vehicle Limited Warranty – 4 years / 80,000 km – likely expired by 2026 unless extended warranty purchased.

  • Corrosion Warranty – 12 years (unlimited km) in many EU countries (e.g., Germany, France, Nordics) – Tesla’s EU perforation warranty is strong.

  • No High Voltage Component Coverage beyond 8 years – out-of-pocket battery replacement is expensive (€12k–€18k).

⚠️ Important: If you’re buying used, verify the in-service date. A 2020 car’s basic warranty is almost certainly expired.


4. Financial & Ownership Benefits (EU, 2026 perspective)

  • No Road Tax in Some EU Countries – Many EU nations still have EV exemptions (e.g., Germany until 2030, Norway 0% VAT/import tax).

  • Lower Benefit-in-Kind (BIK) for company cars – EVs remain favorable vs. ICE in most EU tax regimes.

  • Used EV Depreciation Stabilized – 2020 Long Range models have taken most of their depreciation hit; value is now more stable.

  • FSD Transfer Limitations – FSD stays with the car. Tesla EU rarely offers FSD transfer promotions.

  • Potential Retrofit Upgrades – Some EU service centers offer infotainment upgrade (MCU2 → MCU3) for ~€2k; FSD computer is already HW3 (no upgrade needed for basic FSD functions).


5. Convenience & Safety Benefits (2020 vs. newer)

  • Ultrasonic Sensors (USS) – 2020 Model 3 still has parking sensors (removed in 2023+ Highland). Better for tight EU parking.

  • Radar – 2020 EU cars may still have radar (Tesla removed radar in later 2021 models). Radar provides smoother adaptive cruise in heavy rain/fog.

  • Physical Gear Stalks – Many drivers prefer stalks over Highland’s touchscreen gear selector.

  • Tesla App Integration – Full remote control, sentry mode, preconditioning, service scheduling.


6. Limitations to Be Aware Of (2020 EU FSD)

 
 
IssueImpact
No heat pump (early 2020)Winter range loss ~30% (late 2020 may have heat pump – check VIN)
Older processor (Intel Atom MCU2)Slower infotainment, occasional screen lag vs. AMD Ryzen (2022+)
FSD essentially “vaporware” in EUYou paid for features that don’t exist due to regulation – resale value may not reflect FSD price fully
Battery age5–6 years old in 2026; expect 5–10% degradation (typical: 85–90% original capacity)
Charging speedMax ~250kW on V3 Superchargers, but pack may taper faster than newer LFP batteries

Final Verdict: Who is this car good for?

Buy it if:

  • You want AWD + long range at a lower used price than a 2024 Highland.

  • You value USS sensors and physical stalks.

  • You understand that FSD in the EU is just enhanced highway Autopilot (not city driving).

  • You live in an EU country with strong EV tax incentives.

Avoid if:

  • You expect US-style FSD (unlikely ever to come to 2020 EU hardware).

  • You want a full warranty (2020 basic warranty is expired).

  • You prioritize a heat pump and quieter cabin (get a 2021+ or Highland).