Loading Editor...

How to Use Tesla Paint Shop Skin Designer

TeslaPaintShop is a free, browser-based editor for creating custom digital skins compatible with Tesla Paint Shop / Colorizer. Design using Official Template mode with 20-31 curated patterns per vehicle, or switch to DIY Mode for unlimited creative freedom with custom image uploads. Every exported file is a 1920x1080 PNG — the exact format Tesla requires — packaged in a USB-ready ZIP with the correct Wraps folder structure.

Editor Features

The editor provides real-time preview on high-fidelity vehicle templates for all supported Tesla models: Cybertruck (31 exclusive patterns), Model 3 Legacy, Model 3 Highland (2024+), Model Y Legacy, Model Y Juniper (2025+), and Model Y Long Range. Official Template mode lets you apply patterns to the full body or individual parts — Hood, Roof, Front Door, Rear Door, Trunk, Mirrors, Bumpers, and more. Adjust blend mode (Multiply, Overlay, Screen, Normal) and opacity per part for unlimited visual combinations. DIY Mode enables freeform region painting: click any area of the vehicle to define a fill region, upload a custom image, and adjust scale, rotation, and opacity independently. All processing happens locally in your browser — no data is uploaded to any server.

Frequently Asked Questions

What file format does Tesla Paint Shop require?

Tesla Paint Shop / Colorizer requires a PNG file at exactly 1920x1080 pixels in sRGB color mode. Our editor exports at this exact specification automatically. Store the file in a folder named Wraps at the root of an exFAT-formatted USB drive.

Which Tesla models are compatible with this editor?

The editor supports Cybertruck, Model 3 (Legacy and Highland 2024+), and Model Y (Legacy, Juniper 2025+, and Long Range) — all models that support Tesla Paint Shop / Colorizer on software v2022.44.25 or later.

Is my design data saved or uploaded anywhere?

No. All design work happens entirely in your browser. No designs, images, or personal data are uploaded to any server. The only file that leaves your browser is the PNG you download to your own device.