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

Troubleshooting

Tesla Model S Charging at Fastned

Updated March 2026

The Tesla Model S is compatible with Fastned 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
250 kW
10-80% estimate
30 min
Payment
app, contactless, Plug & Charge

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Tesla Model S supports up to 250 kW DC charging. Fastned chargers deliver up to 400 kW. Your car's maximum intake is the limiting factor here, capping speed at 250 kW even on a faster charger.

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

Tesla Model S Charging Problems

Tesla Model S Charger Will Not Start a Session

You plugged in your Model S and nothing is happening. No green light on the charge port, no animation on the 17-inch touchscreen, just silence. Whether you are at a Supercharger, a third-party CCS2 station, or a home wallbox, there are a handful of common reasons the session will not begin.

Symptoms

  • Charge port LED stays white or flashes red after plugging in the connector
  • 17-inch touchscreen shows no charging animation or displays an error message
  • Supercharger stall makes a click but does not begin delivering power
  • CCS2 connector at a third-party station locks in but charging never starts
  • Tesla app shows 'Not Charging' even though the cable is connected

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check the charge port LED color

    Walk to the left rear of the car and look at the charge port light. White means ready but not connected. Blue means communicating. Green means charging. Red or amber means there is a fault. If it is white with the cable plugged in, remove and reseat the connector firmly.

  2. 2

    Unplug and replug the connector

    Remove the connector completely, wait five seconds, then reinsert it until you hear the latch click. On CCS2 connectors, make sure both the top (AC pins) and bottom (DC pins) sections are seated properly.

  3. 3

    Check for scheduled charging on the touchscreen

    On the 17-inch touchscreen, go to Controls, then Charging. If scheduled charging is active, you will see the planned start time. Tap to disable it or select 'Charge Now' to override the schedule.

  4. 4

    Authorize the session at non-Tesla chargers

    At third-party CCS2 stations, check whether the charger requires you to start the session through an app, RFID card, or contactless payment. Plug & Charge works at supported stations, but many still require manual authorization.

  5. 5

    Try a different stall or charger

    If you are at a Supercharger, move to a different stall. If you are at a third-party station, try the other connector. A faulted charger looks identical to a working one from the outside.

  6. 6

    Restart the touchscreen

    Hold both scroll wheels on the steering wheel for about 10 seconds until the 17-inch touchscreen goes black and reboots. This resets the charging controller and fixes some communication glitches. The car stays on during the reboot.

Tesla Model S Payment Failed at Charging Station

You are plugged in and the charger is waiting for payment, or the Supercharger session will not start because of a billing issue. Payment problems are one of the most common reasons drivers get stuck at chargers, and the Model S has multiple ways to pay depending on where you are charging.

Symptoms

  • Supercharger session will not start and the Tesla app shows a payment error
  • Third-party CCS2 charger displays 'Authorization failed' after tapping your card
  • RFID card is not recognized by the charger's reader
  • Plug & Charge does not activate at a supported station
  • Contactless bank card is rejected by the charger's payment terminal

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check your Tesla account payment method

    Open the Tesla app on your phone. Go to Account, then Payment. Verify your credit card is current and has not expired. If the card was replaced, update the details. Supercharger sessions will not start without a valid payment method on file.

  2. 2

    Try a different payment method at the charger

    If your RFID card failed, try contactless with your bank card or phone. If contactless failed, try the charger operator's app. Having at least two payment methods gives you a backup when one does not work.

  3. 3

    Scan the charger QR code for browser payment

    Most public chargers have a QR code on the unit. Scanning it with your phone opens the operator's payment page in your browser. You can usually pay with a credit card directly without downloading their app.

  4. 4

    Check your banking app for blocked transactions

    Open your banking app and look for flagged or declined transactions. Some banks require you to approve the charge manually. Approve it and retry the payment at the charger.

  5. 5

    Try Plug & Charge by replugging

    If the charger supports Plug & Charge, unplug the CCS2 connector from your Model S, wait a few seconds, and replug. Payment should authorize automatically through the cable. This only works if your Tesla account has Plug & Charge enabled and the charger supports ISO 15118.

  6. 6

    Move to a Supercharger or a different station

    If you cannot resolve the payment issue, find a Tesla Supercharger using the nav on the 17-inch touchscreen. Supercharger billing is handled entirely through your Tesla account, bypassing third-party payment systems.

Tesla Model S Charging Slower Than Expected at Charger

You pulled into a Supercharger expecting 250 kW and the 17-inch touchscreen shows 80 kW. Or your home wallbox is crawling at 3 kW instead of 11 kW. The Model S has one of the fastest charging curves on the road, but reaching peak speed depends on battery temperature, state of charge, and a few settings you can check in under a minute.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging power well below 250 kW on the touchscreen despite a rated charger
  • AC home charging stuck at 3-4 kW instead of the expected 11 kW on 3-phase
  • Charging speed drops sharply after 40-50% on the touchscreen during DC fast charging
  • Supercharger shows significantly lower kW than neighboring stalls
  • Non-Tesla CCS2 charger delivers far less power than its rated maximum

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check if the battery was preconditioned

    On the 17-inch touchscreen, tap the charging icon. If you see a snowflake icon or a message about conditioning, the battery was not warm enough when you arrived. Next time, navigate to the charger using Tesla nav at least 20-30 minutes before arrival so preconditioning kicks in automatically.

  2. 2

    Check your current state of charge

    If you are above 50%, the slower speed is expected on the 95 kWh NCA pack. Peak power happens roughly between 5-30%. For the fastest charging stops on a road trip, arrive between 10-20%.

  3. 3

    Move to an unpaired Supercharger stall

    Look at the stall numbers. If they are labeled in A/B pairs (3A/3B, 4A/4B), pick a stall where the paired stall is empty. At V3 or V4 Superchargers with the Magic Dock or the new V4 cable, this is not a concern.

  4. 4

    Check the AC charge current limit on the touchscreen

    Go to Controls, then Charging on the touchscreen. Look for the charge current setting. Make sure it is set to the maximum amperage. This only affects AC charging at home or destination chargers, not Supercharging.

  5. 5

    Try a different charger or stall

    If speeds remain low, the charger hardware may be degraded. Try another stall at the same location. On non-Tesla CCS2 stations, check the charger display for error codes or reduced power notices.

  6. 6

    Check for a Tesla software update

    Go to Controls, then Software on the touchscreen. If an update is pending, install it. Tesla has adjusted charging curves through over-the-air updates in the past, sometimes improving peak speeds.

Common Fastned Issues

Autocharge not recognizing your vehicle

You have Autocharge set up in the Fastned app, but when you plug in, the charger asks for payment instead of starting automatically.

Symptoms

  • Charger screen prompts for app or card payment after plugging in
  • Screen shows 'Vehicle not recognized' or goes straight to the payment screen
  • Autocharge worked at other Fastned stations but not this one
  • You recently changed your vehicle or payment method in the Fastned app

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check Autocharge status in the Fastned app

    Open the Fastned app, go to your account or Autocharge settings, and verify that Autocharge is toggled on and linked to your current vehicle. If you switched vehicles recently, you may need to re-register the new one.

  2. 2

    Unplug, wait 15 seconds, and plug in again

    The Autocharge handshake happens in the first few seconds. If the timing was off or the connector was not fully seated, the charger defaults to manual payment. Try again with a firm, steady plug-in.

  3. 3

    Make sure your payment method is valid

    Autocharge bills your saved payment method automatically. If the card on file has expired or been blocked, Autocharge will fail even though your vehicle is recognized. Update your payment details in the Fastned app.

  4. 4

    Verify your vehicle supports Autocharge

    Autocharge requires the vehicle to transmit a unique identifier through the charging cable (MAC address). Most newer EVs support this, but some older models or specific firmware versions do not. Check Fastned's website for a compatibility list.

  5. 5

    Start the session via the app as a workaround

    If Autocharge is not cooperating, open the Fastned app, select the station and charger, and start the session manually. You will still get your Gold Member or regular pricing.

Contactless card reader not responding

You tap your debit or credit card on the contactless reader, but nothing happens. No beep, no screen change, no error.

Symptoms

  • No response from the reader when tapping a card
  • Reader beeps but the screen shows 'Transaction failed'
  • Card works at shops and other chargers but not at this Fastned station
  • Apple Pay or Google Pay does not trigger the reader

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Locate the correct reader

    Fastned chargers have the contactless reader built into the charger unit. It is usually a small pad with the contactless symbol near the screen. Make sure you are tapping on the reader, not on the screen itself.

  2. 2

    Hold your card still for 3 to 5 seconds

    Do not tap and remove quickly. Hold the card flat against the reader and wait. Some readers are slower than retail terminals.

  3. 3

    Remove your card from its wallet or phone case

    Other cards, RFID badges, or phone cases with magnets can interfere with the contactless signal. Try the card on its own, directly on the reader.

  4. 4

    Try a different card

    Some card issuers block pre-authorization transactions above a certain threshold. Fastned may pre-authorize 100 EUR or more. If your card's contactless limit is lower, the transaction fails.

  5. 5

    Use the Fastned app instead

    If the contactless reader is faulty, start the session through the Fastned app. You can also use a roaming RFID card from providers like Shell Recharge or Chargemap.

Charger cable too short for your vehicle

The charging cable attached to the Fastned station does not reach your vehicle's charge port. This depends on your vehicle's port position and how you park.

Symptoms

  • Cable reaches the port but is stretched tight with no slack
  • Cable does not reach at all when parked normally
  • You need to reverse in or park at an awkward angle
  • Cable reaches but the connector presses against the car body at a sharp angle

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Reposition your vehicle

    Try parking closer to the charger or at a different angle. If your charge port is on the front left, back in so the port is closest to the cable. Many Fastned stations are designed for pull-through parking.

  2. 2

    Try the other cable

    Fastned chargers typically have two cables (CCS2 and CHAdeMO, or two CCS2 cables from different sides). The cable on the other side of the charger may reach more easily.

  3. 3

    Try a different charger at the same station

    If the station has multiple charger units, another one may give you a better angle. Charger positions vary slightly across units.

  4. 4

    Do not force a stretched cable

    A cable under tension can damage the connector, your charge port, or the cable itself. If it does not reach comfortably, reposition the car. A damaged connector can shut down the charger for everyone.

Speed throttling when multiple vehicles are charging

Your charging speed drops when other vehicles start charging at the same Fastned station. This is power sharing in action.

Symptoms

  • Charging started at 150 kW and dropped to 80 kW when another car plugged in
  • Speed is lower at a busy station than at the same station when it was empty
  • Dashboard shows the charger is limiting power, not the battery
  • Speed fluctuates as other vehicles arrive and leave

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Understand how Fastned power sharing works

    Most Fastned stations have a total power budget shared across all active chargers. When more vehicles charge simultaneously, each one gets a smaller share. This is a station design limitation, not a fault.

  2. 2

    Charge during off-peak hours if possible

    Fastned stations along highways are busiest during weekend travel peaks and holiday periods. Early morning or late evening sessions often mean you have the station to yourself and get full speed.

  3. 3

    Choose a station with more capacity

    Newer Fastned stations and recently upgraded locations tend to have larger power budgets. The Fastned app shows the maximum kW per station. Stations rated at 400 kW per charger usually have more headroom than 150 kW stations.

  4. 4

    Do not wait for full speed. Charge what you need and go.

    Even at reduced speed, DC fast charging is much faster than AC. If you are getting 80 kW instead of 150 kW, it takes a few extra minutes, not hours. Charge to 80% and continue your trip.

Busy station with no queue management

You arrive at a Fastned station and all chargers are occupied. There is no official way to join a queue or reserve a spot.

Symptoms

  • All chargers are in use and multiple cars are waiting
  • No clear queue order. Confusion about who arrived first.
  • App does not show how many vehicles are waiting
  • You are not sure if you should wait or drive to another station

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check the Fastned app for nearby alternatives

    Before committing to a wait, check if there is another Fastned station or competitor fast charger within 10 to 15 minutes. Waiting 20 minutes for a spot is often slower than driving to a nearby empty station.

  2. 2

    Communicate with other waiting drivers

    Fastned does not have a formal queue system. If you decide to wait, make yourself visible by parking near the charger area and, if comfortable, let other waiting drivers know you are in line. Brief eye contact and a nod go a long way.

  3. 3

    Watch for vehicles at high state of charge

    If a vehicle on the charger is already above 80%, it will likely leave soon. Drivers charging from 80 to 100% at a DC fast charger are rare. Most will unplug and leave within minutes.

  4. 4

    Plan stops to avoid peak times

    Holiday weekends, Friday afternoons, and Sunday evenings are the busiest. If your schedule is flexible, adjusting departure time by an hour or two can make a significant difference in charger availability.

  5. 5

    Send feedback to Fastned

    Fastned expands stations based on utilization data. If a station is consistently full, reporting it through the app helps Fastned prioritize adding more chargers at that location.

Fastned App Tips

  • Set up Autocharge in the Fastned app before your first visit. When it works, you just plug in and walk away. No tapping, no scanning.
  • The Fastned app shows real-time availability per station. Green dots mean available, red means occupied. Check before you drive there.
  • If you are a Fastned Gold Member, make sure you are logged in when starting a session through the app. Otherwise you will be charged the standard rate.
  • Fastned stations show live pricing in the app. Gold Member pricing and standard pricing are displayed separately so you know exactly what you will pay.
  • Use the Fastned app to track your charging history. Every session shows energy delivered, peak speed, session duration, and total cost.
  • The app lets you report charger issues directly. If a cable is damaged or a charger is not working, reporting it helps Fastned send maintenance faster.

Payment Tips

  • Fastned offers a Gold Member subscription that gives you a lower per-kWh rate at every Fastned station. Check the Fastned app for current pricing in your country. If you charge at Fastned more than two or three times a month, it usually pays for itself.
  • Contactless payment is available at all Fastned stations. Pre-authorization holds are typically around 100 EUR and release within a few business days.
  • You can also charge at Fastned using a roaming RFID card (Shell Recharge, Chargemap, NewMotion, and others). But roaming rates are usually higher than Fastned's direct pricing.
  • Fastned Gold Member pricing applies to Autocharge and app-initiated sessions. If you pay with a contactless card at the charger, you get the standard (non-member) rate.
  • Fastned may charge idle or overstay fees at some locations. Check the Fastned app or tariff page for current policies. Unplugging promptly when your session is complete is both courteous and avoids potential extra charges.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Tesla Model S charge at Fastned?
Yes. The Tesla Model S uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by Fastned chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 250 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Tesla Model S at Fastned?
Charging a Tesla Model S from 10% to 80% at Fastned takes approximately 30 minutes at up to 250 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at Fastned?
Fastned accepts app, contactless, Plug & Charge. Check the Fastned app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

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