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How to Use Your New Home EV Charger: A Quick Start Guide

If you’ve just had a home charger installed (or you’re about to), the first charge should feel straightforward, not stressful. In this quick start guide, we’ll show you exactly how to use EV charger day-to-day: what to do first, how to set up smart features, and what to check if anything seems off.

Want us to handle the install and walk you through everything before we leave? Book a home installation via email on office@evcinstalls.co.uk and we’ll keep the process simple, tidy, and well explained.

How to use EV charger: The 5-minute first charge checklist

Let’s make your first charge a smooth one. Most home charging sessions follow the same rhythm: plug in, confirm charging has started, then let the car and charger do their thing.

Unbox and identify what you’ve got (tethered vs untethered)

Your day-to-day steps depend on whether your charger is tethered (cable attached) or untethered (you use your own Type 2 cable). Many setups we install and support come with either option depending on the unit, for example Ohme offers tethered or untethered configurations.

Quick way to tell:

Tethered: the cable is permanently attached to the charger

Untethered: you plug your own cable into the charger first, then into the car

Start your first charge safely (plug order, lock, confirm)

Use this simple order:

Park and power down: handbrake on, vehicle in park.

Check the cable: no kinks, cuts, or crushed sections.

Plug in:

Tethered: charger end is already connected, plug into the car.

Untethered: connect cable to charger, then to car.

Confirm it’s charging: your car should show charging status.

Lock up: many cars lock the connector automatically when charging starts.

How to charge an electric car at home without overthinking it

Once you’ve done it, it becomes as normal as plugging in your phone, just with a few extra habits that make life easier.

Choosing the right time to charge

Most households charge overnight or during low-use times. The main idea is consistency: pick a routine that suits your mileage and when the car is usually on the drive.

A practical approach:

If you do predictable daily miles, charge little and often.

If your driving varies, top up when you’re below your comfort level.

What “normal” looks like on day one

On your first day, it’s normal to:

Spend a few minutes getting the cable positioned neatly.

Check the vehicle screen a couple of times to reassure yourself it’s charging.

Decide where you’ll store the cable (especially for untethered units).

And if you’re worrying about disruption, it’s worth knowing what we aim for on install day: we minimise disruption, with power unaffected for 90% of the installation, and typically only off for around 10–15 minutes.

Once you’ve charged at home a couple of times, it stops feeling technical and starts feeling like convenience: plug in, confirm, and wake up to a ready-to-go car.

EV charger app setup: Get smart charging working from day one

Smart features are where home charging gets genuinely convenient. Many chargers include app control as standard (for example, Ohme includes a smart app and an integrated SIM card on its Home Pro model).

Pairing basics (Wi-Fi/Bluetooth/SIM depending on model)

Your pairing steps vary by charger model, but the pattern is usually:

Download the manufacturer’s app.

Create an account.

Pair the charger (often via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, or via built-in connectivity depending on unit features).

If you’ve chosen a charger with built-in connectivity, you may find setup easier in garages or driveways where Wi-Fi is patchy. (That’s one reason some customers like models that specify an integrated SIM.)

Setting schedules and permissions

Once paired, do these three things first:

Set a charging schedule that matches your routine

Enable load management if your charger supports it (many do)

Set access controls if available (useful if your charger is reachable from the street)

Tethered vs untethered EV charger: What changes in daily use

If you’re still deciding what fits your household, here’s the real-world difference in everyday behaviour.

Speed, convenience, cable management

In most homes, your day-to-day experience comes down to convenience and tidiness more than anything else.

Decision point Tethered Untethered
Daily plug-in Fastest, cable is ready Slightly slower, fetch cable
Cable storage Built-in cable presence Cable stored separately
Driveway appearance Cable visible at charger Cleaner look when not charging
Flexibility Fixed connector Swap cables if needed

Ohme’s Home Pro, for example, can be installed as tethered or untethered, so you can match the setup to your driveway and how you park.

What we see most in South East driveways

Because we’re based in Bexley and install across the South East, we often see two common household patterns:

Single EV household: tethered is popular for speed and simplicity.

Two EV or mixed parking: untethered can be handy if cable lengths or positioning changes over time.

If you want to sense-check what suits your area and property style, have a look at where we work across the region on our areas covered page.

EV charger safety checks we recommend for every household

A home charger should be a fit-and-forget bit of kit, but a few simple checks keep things safe and trouble-free.

Visual checks, cable care, weather considerations

Once a week (or whenever you notice something odd):

Inspect the cable for damage or tight bends.

Keep connectors clean and dry.

Make sure the cable is not a trip hazard across a path or doorway.

If you’ve chosen a unit designed for outdoor placement, still treat it like any electrical equipment outdoors: keep connections protected from standing water and avoid closing car doors on the cable.

What to do if something looks off

Stop charging and get advice if:

You see exposed wiring.

The connector feels loose or unusually hot.

The cable has been crushed (for example, by a gate or vehicle tyre).

To see examples of the standard of finish we aim for, browse our recent installations gallery.

EV charger troubleshooting guide: Quick fixes before you call us

If charging does not start, it’s often something simple. Here are the most common checks that solve it quickly.

Common “no charge” causes

Run through this list in order:

Car not unlocked or not fully in park

Connector not fully seated: unplug, replug firmly

Schedule active: the charger may be waiting for the set time

Cable issue: try re-positioning to remove twists or strain

App permissions: if you’ve locked the charger, unlock it in the app

When to stop and get help

Call for support if:

The charger repeatedly fails after a clean replug and a reboot (car and charger).

You notice physical damage.

You’re unsure and would rather not risk it.

We aim to be easy to reach and respond quickly to enquiries, with “within 24 hours” messaging across the site.

If you’re choosing a charger now, you can also compare features on our charger pages, such as:

Ohme Home Pro installation (smart app, integrated SIM, 3-year warranty listed)

myEnergi Zappi 2.1 installation (solar and battery storage integration listed, 3-year warranty listed)

Wallbox Pulsar Plus installation (Wi-Fi/Bluetooth connectivity listed, 3-year warranty listed)

Simplify your life with home charging

Home charging is meant to simplify your life. Once you’ve nailed the basics, the best next step is getting smart scheduling set up properly so your routine runs itself.

If you’d like a fixed quote and a professional install from a NICEIC-approved team, get in touch via email on office@evcinstalls.co.uk.

FAQ: How to use an EV charger at home

Q: How do I start charging with a home EV charger?

A: Park safely, check the cable, plug in securely (charger to car), then confirm charging on your car’s display.

Q: Should I plug the cable into the charger or the car first?

A: For untethered units, connect the cable to the charger first, then to the car. For tethered, plug straight into the car.

Q: Why is my EV charger not charging my car?

A: Common causes include a scheduled charge window, a connector not fully seated, or a locked charger in the app. Unplug and replug firmly, then recheck the schedule.

Q: Do I need an app to use my EV charger?

A: Not always. You can often charge without the app, but the app is useful for scheduling and monitoring, depending on your charger model.

Q: How long does an EV charger installation affect power at home?

A: EVC Installs states power is unaffected for 90% of the installation, and typically only off for around 10–15 minutes.

 

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