
Best Home EV Chargers in the UK for 2026
Six top-rated home wallboxes compared on speed, smart features, app quality, and price.
Picking the best home EV charger is one of the most useful decisions you will make as an electric car owner. Get it right and you have a reliable, smart-connected wallbox that charges overnight, integrates with your energy tariff, and costs almost nothing to run. Get it wrong and you are left with a sluggish app, a temperamental connection, or a charger that misses features your car could use.
These are the six best home EV chargers available in the UK right now, chosen across a range of budgets and use cases. We have compared them on charging speed, smart features, solar integration, app quality, installer availability, and price. There is also a clear recommendation for each buyer type so you can find your match quickly.
Not sure what the installation process involves? Read our guide to getting a home EV charger installed first. For a full cost breakdown, the installation cost guide covers every scenario.
Best home EV chargers at a glance
| Charger | Power | Solar | App | Price installed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ohme Home Pro | 7.4kW | Partial | 4.5/5 | From 1,000 |
| myenergi Zappi v2 | 7/22kW | Best in class | 4.3/5 | From 1,050 |
| Easee One | 7.4kW | No | 4.2/5 | From 900 |
| Pod Point Solo 3 | 7.2kW | No | 4.0/5 | From 800 |
| Andersen A2 | 7.4kW | No | 4.4/5 | From 1,300 |
| Wallbox Pulsar Plus | 7.4kW | Partial | 4.1/5 | From 950 |
Prices are typical installed costs including standard labour. Actual costs vary by installer and cable run length.
Ohme Home Pro — best for smart tariff integration
The Ohme Home Pro has built its reputation on intelligent tariff integration. It connects directly to your energy account and automatically schedules charging during the cheapest periods — Octopus Go, OVO Beyond, and other time-of-use tariffs — without any manual programming. For drivers on a smart tariff, that single feature saves 100-200 pounds per year.
It charges at 7.4kW, supports tethered or untethered configurations, and has a well-rated app showing real-time charging costs. Ohme has a wide OZEV-approved installer network across the UK.
The limitation: solar integration is less comprehensive than the Zappi. If you have panels and want to maximise solar self-consumption, the Zappi is the better call.
Best for: Drivers on a smart energy tariff who want set-and-forget overnight scheduling. Price installed: From around 1,000 pounds.
myenergi Zappi v2 — best for solar panel owners
The Zappi is the go-to charger for anyone with solar panels. It has three charging modes: Fast (charges from the grid at full speed), Eco (blends grid and solar), and Eco+ (charges exclusively from surplus solar). No other mainstream wallbox matches its solar integration depth.
It also supports 22kW three-phase charging if your property has a three-phase supply — useful for the minority of homes where that applies. The myenergi app and Hub system (sold separately) add energy monitoring across the whole home.
The Zappi is slightly bulkier than competitors and the app, while functional, is less polished than Ohme. The Hub (around 100 pounds) is required for full smart scheduling. At 1,050+ pounds installed it is not the cheapest option, but for solar owners it pays back quickly.
Best for: Solar panel owners who want to charge from surplus generation. Price installed: From around 1,050 pounds (plus Hub if required).
Easee One — best compact smart charger
The Easee One is the most compact wallbox in this group — notably smaller than most competitors — and its installation is distinctive: it mounts on a separate base that clips off, making it easy to take with you if you move house. The charger itself is clean, minimal, and unobtrusive on a wall.
Smart features are solid: scheduled charging, load balancing (useful if you have multiple EVs), and a reasonable app. It charges at 7.4kW. The main trade-off is the absence of solar integration and an installer network that, while growing, is less extensive than Ohme or Pod Point in some regions.
Best for: Buyers who value compact design and portability, or who have multiple EVs to manage. Price installed: From around 900 pounds.
Pod Point Solo 3 — best value reliable option
Pod Point is one of the UK's most established EV charging brands, with a large OZEV-approved installer network and a reputation for straightforward, reliable installations. The Solo 3 charges at 7.2kW, has smart scheduling, a decent app, and is widely available across the UK including via EDF Energy partnerships.
It is not the most feature-rich charger in this list, and the app is functional rather than exceptional. But if you want a trusted brand, easy installer access, and a no-fuss installation at the lower end of the price range, the Solo 3 is consistently recommended.
Best for: First-time EV owners who want reliability and a simple installation experience. Price installed: From around 800 pounds.
Andersen A2 — best premium design
The Andersen A2 is in a different aesthetic category to every other wallbox here. It is available in wood, stainless steel, and powder-coated finishes, comes in multiple colour options, and has a cable management system that keeps the charging cable tidy. It looks more like considered design than electrical equipment.
Smart features are strong: 7.4kW charging, scheduled charging, energy monitoring, and a well-rated app. Where it falls short is solar integration (none) and price — at 1,300+ pounds installed it is the most expensive option here.
For most buyers the Andersen premium is not worth it. For those whose charger is prominently visible and for whom kerb appeal genuinely matters, nothing else competes.
Best for: Design-conscious buyers for whom aesthetics justify the premium. Price installed: From around 1,300 pounds.
Wallbox Pulsar Plus — best compact budget smart charger
The Wallbox Pulsar Plus packs 7.4kW charging and a solid smart feature set into one of the smallest enclosures available. It supports scheduled charging, power sharing between multiple units, and has decent app integration including some compatibility with renewable energy systems.
Installer availability is more limited than Ohme or Pod Point, and the app has received mixed reviews for reliability in the UK market. At around 950 pounds installed it sits in the mid-range — not the cheapest, but competitive for what it offers.
Best for: Buyers who want compact dimensions and good smart features at a mid-range price. Price installed: From around 950 pounds.
Which home EV charger should you buy?
For most buyers, the Ohme Home Pro is the strongest all-round choice — excellent smart tariff integration, a reliable installer network, and a competitive price. If you are on Octopus Go or a similar smart tariff, it will pay for itself faster than any alternative.
If you have solar panels, the Zappi is the clear answer regardless of price premium. Its solar integration is genuinely class-leading and no other charger in this group comes close.
If budget is the priority, the Pod Point Solo 3 offers the most trusted installation experience at the lowest typical price. It lacks the bells and whistles of Ohme or Zappi but does the core job reliably.
For a deeper comparison of the three most popular smart chargers, read our Ohme vs Zappi vs Easee head-to-head. And before you buy, check whether you qualify for the EV charger grant — up to 350 pounds off for eligible buyers.
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* Price correct at time of article.
** Included equipment, options and price may differ as all model years shown, please check carefully.