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This guide is for general information only. EVcourse is not affiliated with Dacia or Allego. Charging speeds and compatibility vary by station, vehicle variant, and conditions. When in doubt, contact Dacia or Allego support.

Troubleshooting

Dacia Spring Charging at Allego

Updated March 2026

The Dacia Spring is compatible with Allego chargers. Here is what you need to know about charging speed, connector fit, and how to handle common problems.

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Compatibility Overview

Approximate values. Actual speeds depend on temperature, battery state, and station load.

Connector match
Compatible
Car connector
CCS2
Network connectors
CCS2, CHAdeMO
Max charging speed
34 kW
10-80% estimate
38 min
Payment
app, RFID, contactless

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Dacia Spring supports up to 34 kW DC charging. Allego chargers deliver up to 350 kW. Your car's maximum intake is the limiting factor here, capping speed at 34 kW even on a faster charger.

  • Charging slows down above 80% state of charge on most EVs, including the Dacia Spring.
  • Cold weather reduces charging speed. Preconditioning may not be available on all Dacia Spring variants.
  • If multiple cars share the same Allego station, power may be split between stalls.

Dacia Spring Charging Problems

Dacia Spring Electric 65 Charger Will Not Start Charging

You have plugged the CCS2 or Type 2 connector into your Dacia Spring, but nothing happens. No light, no sound, no charging. This is frustrating, but it is usually a simple fix. Most of the time, the problem is with authentication, the cable connection, or the charger itself.

Symptoms

  • Connector is plugged in but the charger shows no active session
  • The charging indicator light on the dashboard does not turn on
  • The charger screen displays an error code after plugging in
  • You hear a click when plugging in but charging never begins
  • The charger app shows 'waiting' or 'preparing' but never progresses

What to Do

  1. 1

    Authenticate before plugging in

    Use your RFID card, charging app, or contactless payment on the charger before inserting the connector. Many chargers will not unlock the cable until a session is started.

  2. 2

    Unplug and replug the connector

    Remove the CCS2 or Type 2 connector completely from the Spring's charge port. Wait 10 seconds, then reinsert it firmly until you hear and feel the click. Make sure it sits flush.

  3. 3

    Check the charge port

    Inspect the charge port on the front right of the car. Remove any dirt, ice, or water. If the port flap is not fully open, gently push it all the way.

  4. 4

    Disable any charging schedule

    On the dashboard, go to the charging settings and check if a charging timer or schedule is active. Disable it to allow immediate charging.

  5. 5

    Try a different connector or charger

    If the charger has two connectors, try the other one. If the charger still does not start, move to a different charger at the same location or a nearby station.

  6. 6

    Contact the charging network

    If nothing works, call the number displayed on the charger. The operator can sometimes remotely restart the charger or confirm it is out of service.

Dacia Spring Electric 65 Charger Payment Not Working

You are at the charger with your Dacia Spring, ready to plug in, but the payment will not go through. Your card gets declined, the app spins forever, or the charger does not accept your RFID card. Payment problems are one of the most common issues at public chargers, and they have nothing to do with your car.

Symptoms

  • RFID card tap does not start a session
  • Charging app shows a payment error or timeout
  • Contactless bank card is declined at the charger
  • Charger displays 'payment failed' or 'authorization error'
  • Session starts but ends immediately with a billing error

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check which payment methods the charger accepts

    Look at the charger display or the stickers on the unit. It will show which networks, apps, or card types are accepted. If your payment method is not listed, you need a different option.

  2. 2

    Try a different payment method

    If your RFID card fails, try the network's app. If the app fails, try a contactless bank card. Having at least two payment options is essential for public charging.

  3. 3

    Check your bank balance and card status

    Make sure you have enough balance to cover the pre-authorization hold. Check your banking app for any blocked transactions. Some banks flag charging stations as unusual activity.

  4. 4

    Re-tap your RFID card slowly

    Hold the RFID card flat against the reader for 2-3 seconds. Do not tap and pull away quickly. Some readers need a longer contact time.

  5. 5

    Restart the charger session

    Cancel any pending session in the app, wait 30 seconds, and try again from scratch. Sometimes a failed payment leaves a ghost session that blocks new attempts.

  6. 6

    Move to a different charger

    If payment keeps failing on one unit, try the next one. Card readers on individual chargers can be faulty while others at the same station work fine.

Dacia Spring Electric 65 Charging Slower Than Expected

You plugged in your Dacia Spring and the charging speed seems painfully slow. Before you worry, here is the reality: the Spring's maximum DC charging speed is 34 kW. That is by design, not a fault. But if you are seeing speeds well below that, or your AC charging is stuck at 2 kW, there are things you can check.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging speed below the 34 kW maximum
  • AC home charging stuck at 2-3 kW instead of 7 kW
  • Charging speed drops to single digits above 70%
  • The charger display shows lower power than you expected
  • A full DC charge takes much longer than the estimated time

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check the battery temperature

    Look at the dashboard display. If it is cold outside, the battery may need to warm up. Drive for 15-20 minutes before stopping at a DC charger to let the battery reach a better temperature.

  2. 2

    Verify your state of charge

    If you are above 70%, the slower speed is expected. For the fastest DC charging on the Spring, arrive between 10-30% and stop at 80%.

  3. 3

    Check if the charger is shared

    Look at the charger unit. If two cables come from the same unit and someone is using the other one, you are likely sharing power. Move to a charger with a free pair if available.

  4. 4

    Confirm your AC charger capacity

    For home charging, check that your wallbox is rated for at least 32A single-phase to deliver the full 7 kW. A standard household outlet with a portable charger will be much slower.

  5. 5

    Try a different charger

    If DC speeds are well below 30 kW at a low state of charge and warm battery, the charger may be faulty. Try a different unit or station.

  6. 6

    Accept the car's limits

    The Spring is designed as a city car with a small battery. DC fast charging is for occasional use, not daily long-distance travel. Plan accordingly and use AC charging overnight as your primary method.

Common Allego Issues

Allego app not starting a session

You open the Allego app, select the charger, tap 'Start,' and nothing happens. The app may spin, show an error, or claim the charger is offline even though the screen in front of you says otherwise.

Symptoms

  • Allego app shows a loading spinner that never finishes
  • 'Charger unavailable' in the app but the physical charger looks operational
  • App crashes when tapping 'Start Charging'
  • Session appears to start in the app but the charger does not begin delivering power

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Make sure you selected the correct charger and connector

    Allego stations often have multiple charging points. Each one has its own ID, usually printed on a sticker near the connector. Match this ID to the one shown in the Allego app. Selecting the wrong point is the most common reason a session will not start.

  2. 2

    Plug in the cable before starting the session in the app

    Most Allego chargers require the cable to be connected to your car first. The charger needs to detect a vehicle before it will accept a start command from the app.

  3. 3

    Close and reopen the Allego app

    Force-close the app completely (swipe it away from your recent apps), wait a few seconds, and reopen it. Try starting the session again.

  4. 4

    Scan the QR code on the charger instead

    Most Allego chargers have a QR code that opens a web-based payment page. This works independently of the Allego app and lets you pay with a credit card without needing an account.

  5. 5

    Use an RFID card from a roaming provider

    If you have an RFID card from a provider like Shell Recharge, Plugsurfing, or Chargemap, hold it against the reader on the charger. This bypasses the Allego app entirely.

Charger not appearing in the Allego app

You are standing in front of a physical Allego charger, but it does not show up on the Allego app map. The charger is clearly operational and other drivers are using it.

Symptoms

  • Charger location is missing from the the Allego app map entirely
  • App shows the location but with zero available connectors
  • Charger appears under a different brand name in other apps but not in the Allego app
  • Newly installed charger not yet listed

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check if the charger is operated under a different brand

    Allego operates under various local labels in different countries. The charger might be listed under the local brand name rather than 'Allego' in some apps. Look for a sticker or sign on the charger that shows the operator name and EVSE ID.

  2. 2

    Search by charger ID instead of location

    In the Allego app, try the search function and enter the charger's EVSE ID (printed on the unit, usually starting with a country code like DE*, NL*, or FR*). This can find chargers that are not correctly placed on the map.

  3. 3

    Use the QR code on the charger

    Scan the QR code on the charger with your phone camera. This will open a direct link to start a session, even if the charger is missing from the app map.

  4. 4

    Try a different charging app

    Allego chargers are accessible through many roaming providers. Open an app like Chargemap, Shell Recharge, or Plugsurfing and search for the same location. You may be able to start the session there.

Third-party RFID card not accepted

You hold your RFID card from another provider against the reader and the charger beeps but rejects it, or nothing happens at all.

Symptoms

  • Charger beeps once but displays 'Card not recognized'
  • No reaction when holding the RFID card to the reader
  • Card works at other networks but not at this Allego charger
  • 'Authorization failed' message on the charger screen

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check if your roaming provider covers Allego

    Not all RFID providers have roaming agreements with Allego. Check your provider's app or website to confirm Allego is listed in their coverage. Some providers cover only certain Allego locations.

  2. 2

    Hold the card flat and steady for 3 seconds

    Do not wave or tap the card. Place it flat against the reader and hold it still. Allego readers can be slower to respond than some other networks.

  3. 3

    Try a different position on the reader

    The RFID antenna inside the reader has a specific sweet spot. Move your card slowly across the reader surface until you get a response. On some Allego chargers, the reader is on the right side panel rather than the front.

  4. 4

    Check your RFID card is activated

    Some providers require you to activate your RFID card in their app before first use. Open your provider's app and look for card activation or card management settings.

  5. 5

    Fall back to QR code or Allego app

    If your RFID card will not work, scan the QR code on the charger for direct credit card payment, or download the Allego app and register to start the session digitally.

Long delay before charging actually starts

You have authenticated and the charger says it is starting, but 30 seconds, sometimes over a minute, passes before any power flows to your car.

Symptoms

  • Charger screen says 'Starting' or 'Initializing' for over 30 seconds
  • Car shows 'Waiting for charger' or 'Preparing'
  • Power reading stays at 0 kW for a full minute after authentication
  • You wonder if you should unplug and try again

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Wait at least 90 seconds before taking action

    Allego high-power chargers perform a communication handshake with your car before delivering power. This includes safety checks, voltage negotiation, and isolation testing. A 30-60 second delay is normal, especially on 350 kW units.

  2. 2

    Do not unplug during the initialization phase

    Unplugging and re-plugging resets the entire handshake process. If the charger screen shows any progress (status messages, icons changing), let it complete.

  3. 3

    Check if your car's charge port is locked

    The connector should be locked into your car's charge port during initialization. If you can wiggle the connector freely, it may not be fully inserted. Push it in firmly and listen for the lock click.

  4. 4

    If nothing happens after 2 minutes, restart the session

    Unplug the connector, wait 10 seconds, plug it back in, and authenticate again. If the delay repeats, try a different connector or charger at the same station.

Charging power much lower than advertised

The charger is rated for 350 kW, but your car is only pulling 50 kW or less. The session is working, just far slower than expected.

Symptoms

  • Car or charger display shows 40-80 kW on a 350 kW charger
  • Estimated charge time is much longer than expected
  • Power started high but dropped dramatically within minutes
  • Other cars at the same station seem to charge faster

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check your battery level

    DC charging slows significantly above 60-70% state of charge on most cars. If your battery is already at 65% or higher, the reduced speed is your car protecting its battery, not a charger problem.

  2. 2

    Check your car's maximum DC charging rate

    A 350 kW charger can deliver up to 350 kW, but your car decides how much to accept. Many EVs top out at 100-150 kW. Check your car's specifications for its maximum DC charging speed.

  3. 3

    Consider battery temperature

    Cold batteries charge slowly. If you have been parked for hours in cold weather without preconditioning, your car may limit charging to 30-60 kW until the battery warms up. Some cars let you precondition the battery by setting the charger as your navigation destination.

  4. 4

    Check if the station is power-sharing

    Some Allego stations share power between multiple chargers. If three cars are charging simultaneously, each one may get less than the maximum. This is normal at shared-power sites.

  5. 5

    Try a different connector at the same station

    Occasionally one connector delivers less power due to a hardware limitation. If you are getting unusually low power even at a low battery level, unplug and try the next unit.

Allego App Tips

  • The Allego app shows real-time availability and power output for each connector. Check it before driving to a station to avoid arriving at a fully occupied site.
  • You can save favorite stations in the Allego app for quick access. Useful if you have a regular route and know which Allego stations work well.
  • the Allego app shows pricing before you start. Review the per-kWh rate and any session fees before tapping 'Start,' especially at roaming locations where prices vary.
  • If the Allego app is acting up, the QR code on the charger is your fastest backup. It opens a web page that works in any browser, no app required.
  • Allego chargers in different countries may appear under local brand names. If you cannot find a charger in the Allego app, search by the EVSE ID printed on the unit.

Payment Tips

  • Paying directly via QR code or the Allego app often gives you a better rate than paying through a roaming provider. Roaming adds a markup.
  • Allego accepts Visa, Mastercard, and most European debit cards through the QR code payment flow. No account needed.
  • If you use a roaming RFID card, your roaming provider sets the price, not Allego. The same charger can cost different amounts depending on which card you use.
  • Check whether your roaming provider charges a flat session fee on top of the per-kWh rate. Some add 1-2 EUR per session at Allego stations.
  • Check the Allego app for current pricing options and any available subscription plans. Sessions can be paid through the Allego app, QR code, or your roaming provider.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Dacia Spring charge at Allego?
Yes. The Dacia Spring uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by Allego chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 34 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Dacia Spring at Allego?
Charging a Dacia Spring from 10% to 80% at Allego takes approximately 38 minutes at up to 34 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at Allego?
Allego accepts app, RFID, contactless. Check the Allego app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

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