Skip to main content

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

Troubleshooting

Kia EV9 Charging at Ionity

Updated March 2026

The Kia EV9 is compatible with Ionity chargers. Here is what you need to know about charging speed, connector fit, and how to handle common problems.

Share

Compatibility Overview

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

Connector match
Compatible
Car connector
CCS2
Network connectors
CCS2
Max charging speed
233 kW
10-80% estimate
24 min
Payment
app, contactless, Plug & Charge

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Kia EV9 supports up to 233 kW DC charging. Ionity chargers deliver up to 350 kW. Your car's maximum intake is the limiting factor here, capping speed at 233 kW even on a faster charger.

  • Charging slows down above 80% state of charge on most EVs, including the Kia EV9.
  • Cold weather reduces charging speed. The Kia EV9 supports battery preconditioning, which helps.
  • If multiple cars share the same Ionity station, power may be split between stalls.

Kia EV9 Charging Problems

Kia EV9 Charger Won't Start? Step-by-Step Fix Guide

You have plugged the cable into your EV9's right rear charge port, but nothing is happening. No charging indicator on the panoramic display, no LED confirmation. On a large SUV you rely on for family trips or long drives, a failed charge start can be stressful. In most cases, the issue is authentication, utility mode being on, a car setting, or the charger itself.

Symptoms

  • CCS2 or Type 2 cable plugged in but no charging indicator on the panoramic display
  • Charge port LED stays off or flashes red
  • Charger screen shows an error or remains on the start screen
  • Kia Connect app shows the car is not connected to a charger
  • Charging starts briefly then stops within a few seconds

What to Do

  1. 1

    Turn off V2L utility mode

    On the EV9's infotainment screen, go to EV settings. Make sure utility mode or V2L is turned off. Also check the exterior V2L outlet on the rear bumper. If a device was plugged in there, the car may still be in discharge mode.

  2. 2

    Check the charge port and cable

    Open the charge port on the right rear fender. The EV9 is a tall vehicle, so the port is relatively high. Press the flap firmly to open. Insert the CCS2 connector straight in until it clicks. The LED should light up.

  3. 3

    Authenticate with the charger

    If Plug & Charge does not start the session, tap your RFID card, use the charging network's app, or try contactless payment. Have a backup method ready.

  4. 4

    Check for a charging schedule

    On the infotainment screen, go to EV settings, then Scheduled Charging. If a schedule is active, disable it or tap 'Charge Now' to override. The Kia Connect app can also manage schedules.

  5. 5

    Unplug, wait 30 seconds, and try again

    Remove the cable completely, wait 30 seconds, reconnect, and re-authenticate. This resets the communication between the EV9 and the charger.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger

    If nothing works, try another stall at the same station or a different station. Report the broken charger through the charging network's app.

Kia EV9 Charger Payment Failed at a Public Station

You are at a public charger with your EV9, the CCS2 cable is connected, but the payment will not go through. The charger shows an error, the app is not cooperating, or your RFID card gets nothing. Payment problems are one of the most common reasons charging fails to start, and they are almost never a car problem. Here is how to work through it.

Symptoms

  • Charger screen shows 'payment failed' or 'authorization error'
  • RFID card tapped but the charger does not respond
  • Charging network app shows an error during authorization
  • Plug & Charge does not start the session automatically
  • Contactless card payment declined at the terminal

What to Do

  1. 1

    Try a different payment method

    If RFID failed, try the charging network's app. If the app failed, try contactless payment with a card. Switch between methods quickly rather than retrying the same one.

  2. 2

    Check your charging network account

    Open the charging app and check your payment details. Look for expired cards, low prepaid balances, or account issues. Update your payment method if needed.

  3. 3

    Verify Plug & Charge configuration

    In the Kia Connect app, check that Plug & Charge is enabled and linked to the correct charging network. Also verify that this specific station supports Plug & Charge. Not all stations do.

  4. 4

    Look for a QR code on the charger

    Many chargers have a QR code that opens a web payment page. This lets you pay without an account or app. Scan it with your phone camera.

  5. 5

    Try a different charger at the same station

    If one stall's payment terminal is not working, another may be fine. Walk to the next charger and try your payment method again.

Kia EV9 Charging Slower Than Expected at DC or AC

The EV9 is Kia's largest electric SUV, with a 96 kWh battery and 800V architecture that supports up to 233 kW DC charging. When you see 60 kW on the charger screen instead of 200+, it does not match what the specs promise. In most cases, slow charging on the EV9 comes down to battery temperature, the charger's actual voltage and output, or a car setting worth checking.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging speed well below the 233 kW maximum
  • AC charging stuck at 3-4 kW instead of the full 11 kW
  • Charging speed drops sharply above 60-70% state of charge
  • Session starts at low power and never ramps up
  • Panoramic display shows much lower power than the charger's rated output

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check the battery temperature

    Look at the EV information on the panoramic display. If the battery is cold, use the built-in navigation to set a charging destination. The EV9 will precondition the battery automatically on the way. This is especially important in winter given the large battery.

  2. 2

    Check whether the charger supports 800V

    Look at the charger specs on its screen or in the charging network's app. If it is a 400V charger, the EV9's multi-charging system handles the conversion, but you will not see 233 kW. Seek out chargers that explicitly list 800V support.

  3. 3

    Check your state of charge

    If you are above 80%, the speed drop is normal. For road trips, plan stops to arrive between 10-20% and unplug at 80%. The EV9's consumption is around 204 Wh/km, so factor that into your stop planning.

  4. 4

    Review scheduled charging and charge limits

    On the EV settings screen or in the Kia Connect app, check that scheduled charging is not delaying the session and the charge current limit is at maximum.

  5. 5

    Check if the charger is sharing power

    Look at the charger cabinet. If two cables come from the same unit and someone is on the other cable, your speed may be halved. Move to an unoccupied charger if one is available.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger or station

    If speed is still low after checking everything, the charger may be underperforming its rated output. Try another stall or head to a different station.

Common Ionity Issues

Session won't start after contactless payment

You tap your card, the reader beeps, but the charger never begins delivering power. This is one of the most reported issues at Ionity stations.

Symptoms

  • Contactless reader shows a green light but nothing happens
  • Screen says 'Initializing' for more than 60 seconds
  • Card is charged a pre-authorization hold but no energy is delivered
  • Error message appears after the tap but disappears too quickly to read

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Unplug the cable and wait 10 seconds

    This resets the charger's session state. Plug the cable back in firmly until you hear the locking click.

  2. 2

    Try a different payment method

    Open the Ionity app and start the session from there instead. If you have an Ionity subscription, use the app. App-initiated sessions bypass the contactless reader entirely.

  3. 3

    Check your card's contactless limit

    Some banks block contactless transactions above a certain amount. Ionity may pre-authorize up to 100 EUR. If your bank flags this, the session fails silently.

  4. 4

    Move to another stall at the same station

    Individual charger units can have faulty card readers while the rest of the station works fine. Try the next available stall.

  5. 5

    Check for a pending hold on your bank statement

    If a hold was placed but no session started, it typically releases within 3 to 7 business days. You will not be charged for energy you did not receive.

Plug & Charge pairing fails

Your vehicle supports Plug & Charge (ISO 15118) but the Ionity station does not recognize it. The charger asks for payment instead of starting automatically.

Symptoms

  • Charger prompts for app or card payment instead of starting automatically
  • Screen shows 'Vehicle not recognized'
  • Plug & Charge worked at this station before but stopped working
  • Pairing completed in the Ionity app but the station still asks for payment

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Verify Plug & Charge is enabled in your vehicle settings

    Some vehicles (like Porsche Taycan, BMW iX, Mercedes EQS) have a toggle in the infotainment system. If it was turned off during a software update, the charger cannot identify your car.

  2. 2

    Re-pair your vehicle in the Ionity app

    Go to the Ionity app, navigate to Plug & Charge settings, remove the existing pairing, and set it up again. This refreshes the digital certificate.

  3. 3

    Check that your Ionity subscription is active

    Plug & Charge on Ionity requires an active subscription. If your subscription lapsed, the auto-start will fail even if the pairing is intact.

  4. 4

    Try unplugging and re-plugging slowly

    The ISO 15118 handshake happens in the first few seconds. If you plug in too quickly or the connector is not fully seated, the handshake times out and the charger falls back to manual payment.

  5. 5

    Start the session via the app as a fallback

    Plug & Charge issues are often caused by backend certificate mismatches. You can still charge at Ionity subscription rates by starting the session through the app while the issue is resolved.

Charger screen frozen or unresponsive

The charger display is stuck on a loading screen, shows garbled text, or does not respond to touch. The hardware may still work even if the screen does not.

Symptoms

  • Screen shows a logo or loading animation that never progresses
  • Touch inputs on the screen do nothing
  • Screen is completely black but the charger lights are on
  • Screen shows an error code that does not clear

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Try plugging in and starting via the app

    The screen and the charging hardware are separate systems. Many Ionity chargers will still deliver power even with a frozen display if you initiate the session through the Ionity app.

  2. 2

    Unplug completely and wait 30 seconds

    Sometimes unplugging triggers a soft reset of the charger unit. Wait, then try again.

  3. 3

    Try a different stall

    Ionity stations typically have multiple charger units. A frozen screen on one unit does not affect the others.

  4. 4

    Report the charger in the Ionity app

    Open the Ionity app, find the station, and report the specific charger as out of order. This helps Ionity dispatch maintenance faster.

App shows station available but charger is faulted

The Ionity app shows green (available) status for a station, but when you arrive, the chargers display errors or are physically out of service.

Symptoms

  • App shows 'Available' but charger displays 'Out of Order'
  • All stalls at the station are faulted despite the app showing availability
  • Charger has a maintenance sticker or barrier but the app has not been updated
  • You drove to a station specifically because the app said it was free

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Refresh the station status in the app

    Pull down to refresh the station view. Status updates can lag by several minutes, especially after a charger was recently reported or rebooted.

  2. 2

    Check individual charger status, not just the station

    Tap into the station details in the Ionity app. Even if some stalls show faulted, others at the same station may still work.

  3. 3

    Try plugging in anyway

    Occasionally a charger shows a stale error on its screen from a previous session but works fine for the next user. Plug in and attempt to start via the app.

  4. 4

    Plan a backup station

    Before driving to an Ionity station, check if there is an alternative station within 10 to 15 minutes. Ionity stations along highways sometimes have another Ionity or competitor station at the next exit.

  5. 5

    Report the discrepancy

    Use the 'Report a problem' option in the Ionity app. Accurate reports help Ionity fix status sync issues and prioritize maintenance.

Unexpectedly high ad-hoc price

You charged without an Ionity subscription subscription and the per-kWh price is significantly higher than you expected. Ionity's ad-hoc rate is one of the most expensive in Europe.

Symptoms

  • Invoice shows 0.75 EUR/kWh or higher
  • Total cost for a short session is much higher than expected
  • Price displayed on the charger screen was not noticed before starting
  • You assumed the price would be similar to home charging or other networks

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check if Ionity subscription would save you money

    Ionity offers subscription plans that reduce the per-kWh price significantly. Check the Ionity app for current plans and rates. If you charge at Ionity more than once or twice a month, a subscription usually pays for itself.

  2. 2

    Check your vehicle manufacturer's charging plan

    Many EV manufacturers (Hyundai, Kia, BMW, Mercedes, Volkswagen Group, Ford) offer bundled Ionity pricing through their own apps. You may already have access to a discounted rate through your car brand.

  3. 3

    Look at the charger screen before starting next time

    Ionity displays the per-kWh price on the charger screen before the session starts. The ad-hoc price is always shown.

  4. 4

    Consider roaming providers for occasional use

    If you do not want a subscription, some roaming apps (like Shell Recharge, Chargemap, or Maingau) offer lower Ionity rates than the ad-hoc price.

Charging speed much lower than 350 kW

The station advertises 350 kW but your vehicle is charging at a fraction of that speed. This can be normal or it can indicate a problem.

Symptoms

  • Dashboard shows 50 to 100 kW at a 350 kW charger
  • Charging started fast but dropped sharply after a few minutes
  • Other vehicles at the same station seem to charge faster
  • Speed is lower than what you normally get at Ionity

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check your battery level

    Charging speed drops significantly above 60 to 80% state of charge on most vehicles. This is normal battery behavior, not an Ionity issue. For the fastest stop, charge from 10 to 80% and move on.

  2. 2

    Check the battery temperature

    Cold batteries charge slowly. If your vehicle supports battery preconditioning, set the Ionity station as your navigation destination. The car will warm the battery on the way there.

  3. 3

    Verify your vehicle's max DC charging speed

    Not all EVs can accept 350 kW. Many popular models top out at 100 to 150 kW. The charger delivers only what the vehicle requests.

  4. 4

    Try a different stall

    Individual charger units can occasionally have hardware limitations or faults that reduce output. Moving to another stall at the same station can sometimes restore full speed.

  5. 5

    Check for power sharing

    Some Ionity stations share power between adjacent stalls. If the neighboring stall is also in use, both vehicles may receive reduced power. Try a stall that is not next to another active session.

Ionity App Tips

  • Download the Ionity app before your trip. You need an account to start sessions at stations where contactless payment is not available or not working.
  • Enable push notifications in the Ionity app. You will get alerts when your session ends or if charging stops unexpectedly.
  • Use the Ionity app's filter to show only stations along your route. The app integrates with Apple Maps and Google Maps for navigation.
  • Check real-time stall availability in the app before driving to a station. Tap the station pin to see which individual chargers are free, occupied, or faulted.
  • If you have an Ionity subscription, always start sessions through the app to make sure you get the subscription rate. Contactless payment defaults to the ad-hoc price.

Payment Tips

  • Ionity offers subscription plans that significantly reduce the per-kWh price compared to the ad-hoc rate. Check the Ionity app for current plans and pricing. Worth it if you use Ionity twice a month or more.
  • Contactless payment pre-authorizes up to 100 EUR on your card. The actual charge appears later and the hold is released within a few days.
  • Check if your car brand offers an Ionity deal. Hyundai, Kia, BMW, Mercedes, VW Group brands, and Ford all have discounted Ionity access through their own charging apps.
  • Ad-hoc (pay-as-you-go) rates at Ionity are among the highest in Europe. If you do not want a subscription, roaming through Shell Recharge or Chargemap is usually cheaper than paying ad-hoc.
  • Ionity invoices are available in the app under your account. You can download PDF receipts for expense reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Kia EV9 charge at Ionity?
Yes. The Kia EV9 uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by Ionity chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 233 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Kia EV9 at Ionity?
Charging a Kia EV9 from 10% to 80% at Ionity takes approximately 24 minutes at up to 233 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at Ionity?
Ionity accepts app, contactless, Plug & Charge. Check the Ionity app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

Stuck at the charger? Open the app.

Step-by-step help for real charging problems. Log the experience. Free on iOS and Android.

Free to download · Available on iOS and Android