if i had a long(ish) commute with a supercharger along the way there is no doubt id have chosen a used 2016ish tesla S. even if a drive unit or similar went out you would more than pay for the cost of the car and replacement drive unit in essentially "free gas" forever.
as it is now, I think ive used a public charging station twice since buying the lightning, neither of which required me to stop...I only did so because i wanted to see how things worked and the cost per kw at different stations!
We now regularly use our 2023 Tesla MY LR for road trips. This weekend we will be heading to Wyndam Old Town Alexandria for a Saturday evening concert, arriving Friday evening. It’s about 120 miles each direction, which consumes about 40-50% of the pack. We charge to 90% before leaving and then enjoy free L2 public charging in the OTA parking garage that is shared with the Hilton (IIRC) hotel. The garage has three BEV charging parking spots - two of them are Tesla L2 NACS wall chargers and the third is a GE L2 J1772 wall charger. We juice up for free as a result. Nice perk.
We also head to Wyndham Shawnee quite often - we will be there in October for a long weekend - it’s about 138 miles each direction - we use about 50-60% of the pack - and we use local Tesla L3 public chargers in the area to charge back up at some point either over the weekend or on the way back home if we don’t drive enough locally to warrant a charging stop while there.
A few times a year we head up to Wyndham Bentley Brook - which has 6-8 free L2 public chargers. That’s about 280-300 miles each way, so we will stop once on the way up somewhere north of NYC to charge while eating lunch or dinner, and then we charge for free on resort.
The farthest we have ventured is about 600 miles each way - down to Myrtle Beach area - and that requires three charging stops for a total of about 50 minutes of charging time. Nine hours total. The best we have ever done in our ICE vehicle is nine hours.
It’s all point and click for charging, requires no effort other than entering your destination into the navigation system and then using FSD to drive the vehicle for the vast majority of the trip. Easy peasy.
Like you, our daily usage driving is via 100% home charging with a Tesla wall charger at off peak overnight rates around 10-13 cents per kWh.