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

Troubleshooting

Smart #1 Charging at Shell Recharge

Updated March 2026

The Smart #1 is compatible with Shell Recharge 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
150 kW
10-80% estimate
30 min
Payment
app, RFID, contactless

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Smart #1 supports up to 150 kW DC charging. Shell Recharge chargers deliver up to 300 kW. Your car's maximum intake is the limiting factor here, capping speed at 150 kW even on a faster charger.

  • Charging slows down above 80% state of charge on most EVs, including the Smart #1.
  • Cold weather reduces charging speed. The Smart #1 supports battery preconditioning, which helps.
  • If multiple cars share the same Shell Recharge station, power may be split between stalls.

Smart #1 Charging Problems

Smart #1 Pro Plus Charger Will Not Start a Session

You plugged the connector into your Smart #1, but the charger is not responding. No charging indicator, no session starting, nothing happening. This is almost always a charger-side or authentication issue, not a problem with the car. Let us work through it.

Symptoms

  • The CCS2 or Type 2 connector is in but nothing happens
  • The charger screen shows an error or stays on the welcome screen
  • The Smart #1 dashboard does not show a charging session
  • You hear the connector lock but charging does not begin
  • The charging app shows the charger as available even though you are plugged in

What to Do

  1. 1

    Authenticate with the charger first

    Tap your RFID card, open the charging network app, or use contactless payment on the charger. Wait for the charger screen to confirm the session before plugging in.

  2. 2

    Remove and reinsert the connector

    Unlock the connector (press the button on the charger handle), remove it fully, wait 10 seconds, then push it back in firmly until it clicks and locks.

  3. 3

    Lock and unlock the car

    Use the key fob or Smart app to lock the car, wait 15 seconds, then unlock it. This can reset the charging system if it is in a fault state.

  4. 4

    Check the charge port for ice or debris

    Open the charge port flap on the rear left of the Smart #1 and inspect it. In winter, warm the port gently with your hands or use lukewarm water if ice is present. Never use hot water.

  5. 5

    Restart the infotainment system

    Press and hold the power button on the center screen for 10 seconds to restart the system. Wait for it to boot fully, then try plugging in again.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger

    If the session still will not start, the charger is likely faulty. Move to another charger at the station or a different location.

Smart #1 Pro Plus Payment Failed at Charging Station

You are ready to charge your Smart #1, but the payment will not go through. The RFID card does not register, the app gives an error, or your bank card gets declined. This is a charger and payment issue, not a car issue. Here is what to do.

Symptoms

  • RFID card tap does nothing at the charger
  • Charging app shows a payment or authorization error
  • Contactless bank card is declined
  • Charger displays a payment error code
  • Session starts but stops immediately with a billing message

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check which payment methods the charger accepts

    Look at the stickers and screen on the charger for accepted networks, apps, and card types. If your payment method is not listed, you need to try something else.

  2. 2

    Switch to a different payment method

    Try a different RFID card, a different charging app, or a contactless bank card. Having multiple options is essential for public charging in Europe.

  3. 3

    Check your available balance

    Open your banking app and verify you have at least 80 EUR available to cover the pre-authorization hold. If not, use a card with a higher balance.

  4. 4

    Hold the RFID card steadily

    Place the RFID card flat against the reader and hold it for 2-3 seconds. Do not tap and remove quickly. Some readers are slow to respond.

  5. 5

    Cancel and retry the session

    If a previous attempt is stuck, cancel it through the app first. Wait a minute, then start a fresh session from scratch.

  6. 6

    Try the other charger unit

    If the payment hardware is faulty on one unit, the neighboring charger at the same station may work fine.

Smart #1 Pro Plus Charging Slower Than Expected Speed

Your Smart #1 should charge at up to 150 kW on DC and 22 kW on AC, but the numbers on the screen tell a different story. Maybe you are stuck at 40 kW on a fast charger, or your wallbox is only delivering 7 kW. Here is what is going on and how to fix it.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging well below the 150 kW maximum
  • AC charging stuck at 7 or 11 kW instead of 22 kW
  • Charging speed drops sharply after 50-60% state of charge
  • The dashboard shows lower power than the charger rating
  • Charging from 10% to 80% takes much longer than the advertised 30 minutes

What to Do

  1. 1

    Use navigation to activate preconditioning

    Set the DC charger as your destination in the Smart #1's built-in navigation. This activates battery preconditioning, warming or cooling the battery to the ideal temperature before you arrive.

  2. 2

    Check your state of charge

    If you are above 60%, the slower speed is expected. For the fastest DC charging, arrive between 10-20% and charge to 80%.

  3. 3

    Verify the charger's actual output

    Check the charger display for its rated power. If it says 50 kW, that is your maximum regardless of the Smart #1's 150 kW capability. Look for chargers rated 150 kW or higher.

  4. 4

    Check if the charger is shared

    If another car is using the adjacent connector on the same charger unit, you may be sharing power. Move to a charger with no other user if possible.

  5. 5

    For AC, verify three-phase connection

    To get 22 kW AC, your wallbox must be wired for three-phase at 32A. Check with your electrician. If you only have single-phase, the maximum is about 7.4 kW.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger

    If speeds are still low after checking everything, the charger may be degraded. Try another charger at the same station or a different location.

Common Shell Recharge Issues

RFID card not recognized at the charger

You tap your Shell Recharge RFID card on the charger's reader but it does not respond, beeps an error, or shows 'Card not recognized.'

Symptoms

  • Charger beeps but displays 'Unknown card' or 'Authorization failed'
  • No response at all when tapping the card
  • Card works at some stations but not others
  • Card worked yesterday at the same charger but does not work today

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Hold the card still on the reader for 3 to 5 seconds

    RFID readers at some chargers are slow. Do not tap and remove quickly. Hold the card flat against the reader and wait for a confirmation beep or screen change.

  2. 2

    Check that your RFID card is activated

    New Shell Recharge RFID cards must be activated in the Shell Recharge app before first use. Go to the app, find the RFID section, and make sure the card status shows active.

  3. 3

    Try starting the session through the app instead

    Open the Shell Recharge app, find the station, select the charger, and start the session digitally. This bypasses the RFID reader entirely and uses the roaming connection.

  4. 4

    Check if the CPO supports Shell Recharge roaming

    Not every charger that appears in the Shell Recharge app accepts the Shell Recharge RFID card. Some chargers only accept app-based roaming. The station details in the app usually indicate which payment methods are supported.

  5. 5

    Clean the card and try again

    Dirt, scratches, or a phone case between the card and reader can block the RFID signal. Remove the card from any holder, wipe it, and try again on the reader's sweet spot (often marked with a contactless symbol).

Roaming vs direct pricing confusion

The price you pay through Shell Recharge is different from the price shown on the charger's screen. This is because Shell Recharge adds a roaming markup on top of the CPO's base rate.

Symptoms

  • Charger screen shows 0.39 EUR/kWh but Shell Recharge bills 0.55 EUR/kWh
  • Invoice includes fees not displayed at the charger (session fee, per-minute fee)
  • Same station is cheaper when using the CPO's own app
  • Pricing in the Shell Recharge app does not match the final invoice

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check the Shell Recharge app for the roaming price before starting

    Before you tap your card or start a session, open the Shell Recharge app and select the station. The app shows the Shell Recharge price, which includes any roaming fee. This is the price you will actually pay.

  2. 2

    Understand the pricing structure

    Shell Recharge typically charges a per-kWh rate plus sometimes a session start fee or per-minute fee. The charger screen shows the CPO's direct price, not the roaming price. These are two different rates for two different billing relationships.

  3. 3

    Consider using the CPO's own app for lower rates

    If you charge at the same network regularly (for example, Allego, Fastned, or EnBW), their own app usually offers a lower price than roaming through Shell Recharge. The trade-off is managing multiple apps.

  4. 4

    Download your invoice from the Shell Recharge app

    Go to your charging history in the Shell Recharge app. Each session has a detailed breakdown showing energy delivered, per-kWh rate, session fees, and total cost. Compare this with what you expected.

Session not starting via QR code

You scan the QR code on the charger to start a session through the Shell Recharge app, but nothing happens or you get an error.

Symptoms

  • QR code opens the Shell Recharge app but shows 'Station not found'
  • QR code opens a web page instead of the app
  • App shows 'Unable to start session' after scanning
  • QR code is faded, damaged, or partially covered by a sticker

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Search for the station manually in the app

    If the QR code does not work, open the Shell Recharge app, search for the station by name or location, and start the session from the station page. You may need to select the specific connector or charger ID.

  2. 2

    Check the charger ID number

    Every charger has an ID printed somewhere on the unit (usually near the QR code or on a label). Enter this ID manually in the Shell Recharge app if the QR scan fails.

  3. 3

    Make sure the QR code belongs to Shell Recharge

    Many chargers have multiple QR codes from different roaming providers and the CPO itself. Make sure you are scanning the Shell Recharge QR code, not the CPO's own code. Scanning the wrong code opens the wrong app or website.

  4. 4

    Try the RFID card or contactless payment instead

    QR code start is just one method. Tap your Shell Recharge RFID card or use contactless payment if the charger supports it.

  5. 5

    Check your internet connection

    Starting a session via QR code requires the app to communicate with Shell Recharge's servers and the CPO's backend. If you have weak mobile signal (common at highway rest stops), the request may time out. Try switching between Wi-Fi and mobile data.

App showing wrong charger status

The Shell Recharge app shows a charger as available, occupied, or offline, but the actual status is different when you arrive.

Symptoms

  • App shows 'Available' but the charger is out of order or has an error screen
  • App shows 'Occupied' but no vehicle is connected
  • Status has not updated for hours and seems stale
  • App shows fewer chargers at a station than physically exist

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Understand that status data is delayed

    Shell Recharge gets charger status from the CPO's systems through the roaming connection. This data can lag by 5 to 15 minutes. A charger that just became available may still show as occupied in the app.

  2. 2

    Try plugging in regardless of app status

    If you are already at the station and a charger looks physically available (no vehicle connected, no error on screen), try plugging in and starting a session. The real-time status at the charger overrides whatever the app shows.

  3. 3

    Check the CPO's own app for more accurate status

    The CPO (the company that actually operates the charger) usually has more accurate real-time status than roaming aggregators like Shell Recharge. If accuracy matters, cross-check with the CPO's app or website.

  4. 4

    Report the incorrect status

    Use the Shell Recharge app to report the charger issue. This helps improve status accuracy over time.

Billing discrepancy between Shell Recharge and the CPO

The amount billed by Shell Recharge does not match what you expected based on the energy delivered or the session duration. This can happen because of how roaming billing works.

Symptoms

  • Billed for more kWh than your vehicle's dashboard shows
  • Charged a session fee you did not expect
  • Per-minute idle fee added even though you unplugged on time
  • Double charge: both Shell Recharge and the CPO billed you

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Compare the Shell Recharge invoice with your vehicle's data

    Your vehicle's dashboard shows how much energy the battery received. The charger meters how much energy it delivered, which includes conversion losses. A 5 to 10% difference is normal.

  2. 2

    Check for per-minute fees

    Some CPOs charge a per-minute fee (for time spent connected) on top of the per-kWh fee. This can be especially costly during slow AC charging sessions. Check the pricing breakdown in the Shell Recharge app.

  3. 3

    Look for session or start fees

    Some stations add a fixed fee per session (for example, 0.35 EUR to 1.00 EUR). This appears in the Shell Recharge invoice as a separate line item.

  4. 4

    Dispute the charge through the Shell Recharge app

    If the amount is clearly wrong (double billed, charged for a session that never started, or obviously excessive), contact Shell Recharge support through the app. Go to your charging history, select the session, and use the dispute or help option.

  5. 5

    Keep your vehicle's charge data as evidence

    Take a photo of your vehicle's charging screen or dashboard showing the kWh received and the session duration. This is useful if you need to dispute a charge.

Shell Recharge App Tips

  • The Shell Recharge app shows you the roaming price before you start. Always check this, not the price on the charger screen. They are often different.
  • Activate your RFID card in the Shell Recharge app before you need it. Card activation can take a few minutes, and you do not want to do this at the charger.
  • Use the app's filter to show only DC fast chargers, AC chargers, or specific connector types. This saves time when you need a quick stop.
  • Save your frequent stations as favorites in the app. You will get faster access and can spot when a station goes offline.
  • Shell Recharge gives you access to multiple CPO networks. If a station is not working through Shell Recharge, the CPO's own app might work since the issue could be roaming-specific.
  • Check the 'Supported payment methods' on each station's detail page. Not all stations accept RFID, QR code, and contactless. Some only support one method through Shell Recharge.

Payment Tips

  • Roaming through Shell Recharge is almost always more expensive than using the CPO's own app. For networks you use regularly, consider signing up with the CPO directly.
  • Shell Recharge RFID cards work across all roaming partners. One card, many networks. But the per-kWh price varies depending on which CPO operates the charger.
  • Watch for per-minute fees at AC chargers. Some CPOs charge by time (not just energy), which adds up fast if your vehicle charges slowly on AC.
  • Shell Recharge invoices are available in the app and can be exported as PDF for expense reports. Go to your charging history and tap any session for the full breakdown.
  • If you see a double charge (Shell Recharge and the CPO both billed you), contact Shell Recharge support immediately. This happens occasionally with roaming sessions and is always resolved in favor of the customer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Smart #1 charge at Shell Recharge?
Yes. The Smart #1 uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by Shell Recharge chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 150 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Smart #1 at Shell Recharge?
Charging a Smart #1 from 10% to 80% at Shell Recharge takes approximately 30 minutes at up to 150 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at Shell Recharge?
Shell Recharge accepts app, RFID, contactless. Check the Shell Recharge app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

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