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

Troubleshooting

Tesla Model Y Charging at EnBW mobility+

Updated March 2026

The Tesla Model Y is compatible with EnBW mobility+ 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
Max charging speed
250 kW
10-80% estimate
27 min
Payment
app, RFID, contactless

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Tesla Model Y supports up to 250 kW DC charging. EnBW mobility+ chargers deliver up to 300 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 Y.
  • Cold weather reduces charging speed. The Tesla Model Y supports battery preconditioning, which helps.
  • If multiple cars share the same EnBW mobility+ station, power may be split between stalls.

Tesla Model Y Charging Problems

Tesla Model Y Charger Won't Start a Charging Session

You have plugged in your Model Y, the charge port light is doing something weird, and nothing is happening. This is one of the most common frustrations for EV drivers. The good news is that it is almost always fixable on the spot. The cause is usually authentication, the charge port latch, or the charger itself.

Symptoms

  • Charge port LED flashes amber or red after plugging in the CCS2 connector
  • Touchscreen shows an error message instead of the charging screen
  • Charger display says 'Waiting for vehicle' or 'Authentication failed'
  • Charge port door will not open when pressing the button on the connector
  • Supercharger session does not start automatically after plugging in

What to Do

  1. 1

    Unplug and replug the connector firmly

    Pull the connector out completely. Wait 5 seconds. Push it back in firmly until you hear a click and the charge port LED turns green or starts pulsing blue. On CCS2, the lower DC pins need to seat fully. The Model Y charge port is on the left rear, same position as the Model 3.

  2. 2

    Check the touchscreen for error messages

    Look at the charging screen on the 15-inch touchscreen. It will tell you if there is an error, if scheduled charging is active, or if the car is waiting for something. If Scheduled Charging is delaying the session, tap 'Charge Now' to override it.

  3. 3

    Authenticate with the charging network

    At non-Tesla CCS2 chargers, open the network's app (Ionity, Shell Recharge, or whichever network). Start the session through the app, or tap your RFID card on the reader. At Tesla Superchargers, billing is automatic through your Tesla account. No app needed.

  4. 4

    Try the manual charge port release if the port is stuck

    If the charge port will not open, try tapping your Tesla key card on the B-pillar and pressing the charge port door. You can also open it from the touchscreen under Controls. In freezing weather, pour lukewarm water around the port to melt ice. Never force the door open.

  5. 5

    Restart the touchscreen

    Hold both scroll wheels on the steering wheel for about 10 seconds until the Tesla logo appears. This restarts the infotainment system and can clear communication errors between the Model Y and the charger. Your driving settings are not affected.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger or stall

    If nothing works, the charger may be faulty. Move to a different stall or station. The Tesla app shows Supercharger stall availability in real time. For non-Tesla chargers, check the network's app for station status.

Tesla Model Y Payment Failed or Cannot Pay at Charger

You are at a charger and it will not take your payment. Or the session ended and you have no idea how you were billed. Payment is one of the most confusing parts of public charging, especially when moving between Tesla Superchargers and non-Tesla CCS2 chargers. Each one works differently, and the error messages are rarely helpful.

Symptoms

  • Charger display shows 'Payment failed' or 'Card declined' when you try to start a session
  • Supercharger session will not start and the Tesla app shows a billing issue
  • Non-Tesla CCS2 charger requires an app you do not have installed
  • Contactless payment terminal on the charger does not respond to your card or phone
  • You completed a charge but cannot find the receipt or understand the pricing

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check your Tesla account payment method

    Open the Tesla app, go to Account, then Payment. Make sure your credit card is valid and not expired. If it was declined, update the card details. Supercharger sessions will not start until a valid payment method is on file. You can add multiple cards as backup.

  2. 2

    Download the charging network's app

    At non-Tesla CCS2 chargers, check the network logo on the charger. Download their app (Ionity, Shell Recharge, Fastned, or whichever brand). Create an account and add a payment method. Then start the session through the app. This takes a few minutes the first time, so do it before your next road trip.

  3. 3

    Try contactless payment if the charger supports it

    Look for a contactless payment symbol on the charger. Tap your credit card, debit card, or phone (Apple Pay, Google Pay). If the terminal does not respond, try holding your card flat against the reader for 2-3 seconds. If it still fails, the terminal may be offline.

  4. 4

    Call your bank if the card keeps declining

    If your card is declined repeatedly, your bank may be blocking the charge as suspicious activity. This is common with foreign networks or large pre-authorization holds. Call your bank and authorize the transaction. Some banks let you do this through their app.

  5. 5

    Move to a different charger if payment is not possible

    If you cannot pay at this station, use the Tesla nav to find a nearby Supercharger where billing is automatic. Or search for another CCS2 charger from a different network. Having accounts with 2-3 charging networks gives you backup options on road trips.

  6. 6

    Check your receipts after charging

    Tesla Supercharger receipts appear in the Tesla app under Charging History. Non-Tesla charger receipts come through the network's app or via email. If pricing seems wrong, compare the posted per-kWh or per-minute rate on the charger with your receipt.

Tesla Model Y Charging Slower Than Expected at Charger

You plugged in your Model Y expecting 250 kW and the touchscreen shows 40 kW. Or your home wallbox is stuck at 3 kW instead of 11 kW. Slow charging on the Model Y Long Range is almost never a defect. It is usually the battery temperature, your state of charge, a charger limitation, or a setting you can fix on the 15-inch touchscreen in under a minute.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging power well below the 250 kW maximum shown on the touchscreen
  • AC home charging stuck at 3-4 kW instead of the expected 11 kW on 3-phase
  • Charging speed drops sharply after reaching 50-60% on the touchscreen
  • Supercharger shows lower kW than the stall is rated for
  • Touchscreen charging animation shows a slow trickle instead of rapid charging

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check the battery temperature on the touchscreen

    Tap the charging icon on the touchscreen. If the battery is cold, you will see a snowflake icon or a message about reduced charging speed. To fix this next time, use the Tesla nav to route to a Supercharger. The Model Y will automatically precondition the battery during the drive, warming it for peak charging speed.

  2. 2

    Check your state of charge before plugging in

    If you are above 60%, expect reduced speeds. The Model Y Long Range peaks at 250 kW but only in the 5-30% range. For the fastest DC sessions on road trips, plan your stops to arrive between 10-20%. Charging from 10% to 80% is far faster per kWh added than 80% to 100%.

  3. 3

    Move to an unpaired Supercharger stall

    Look at the stall numbers. If they are labeled in pairs (1A/1B, 2A/2B), pick a stall where the paired stall is empty. V3 and V4 Superchargers do not have this problem. The Tesla app shows real-time stall availability.

  4. 4

    Check the AC charge current limit

    On the touchscreen, go to Controls, then Charging. Look for the charge current slider. Make sure it is set to the maximum value your wallbox supports. This only affects AC charging, not Supercharging or DC fast charging.

  5. 5

    Try a different charger or stall

    If speeds are still low, the charger may be degraded or faulty. Try a different stall at the same location. On non-Tesla CCS2 chargers, some stations deliver less power than advertised, especially when multiple vehicles are charging.

  6. 6

    Check for a software update

    Go to Controls, then Software on the touchscreen. If an update is available, install it over Wi-Fi. Tesla occasionally adjusts charging curves through software updates that can improve peak power or thermal management.

Common EnBW mobility+ Issues

Roaming pricing unclear or higher than expected

You started a session through EnBW mobility+ and the per-kWh price was significantly higher than you expected. The same charger costs different amounts at different times, and the pricing logic feels opaque.

Symptoms

  • Per-kWh rate on the receipt is higher than the rate shown on the EnBW website
  • Same charger location costs more through EnBW mobility+ than through the CPO's own app
  • Price differs between two chargers at the same station
  • Unexpected 'roaming fee' or 'session fee' on your invoice

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check the price before you start the session

    In the EnBW mobility+ app, tap on the charger and look for the pricing details before starting. The app shows the per-kWh rate for that specific charger. Prices vary because each CPO sets different roaming rates.

  2. 2

    Understand the pricing tiers

    EnBW mobility+ groups chargers into pricing tiers. 'EnBW own' chargers are cheapest, 'roaming standard' is mid-range, and 'roaming plus' (typically high-power chargers from premium CPOs like Ionity) costs more. The tier is usually shown in the charger details.

  3. 3

    Compare with the CPO's own app

    If a charger is operated by Ionity, for example, check the Ionity app or website for their direct pricing. Sometimes the CPO's own app or RFID card is cheaper because there is no roaming middleman. If you use that CPO frequently, their own account may save you money.

  4. 4

    Consider the EnBW mobility+ tariff you are on

    EnBW offers different tariffs (with and without a monthly fee). The tariff with a monthly fee usually gives lower per-kWh rates. In the app, go to your profile to check which tariff you are on and whether switching would save you money based on your usage.

  5. 5

    Watch for idle fees and blocking fees

    Some chargers accessed through EnBW mobility+ charge a per-minute fee after your car finishes charging but the cable is still plugged in. Move your car promptly once charging is complete to avoid these fees.

App not loading charger details

You tap on a charger pin on the map and the detail screen is blank, shows a loading spinner forever, or displays outdated information. You cannot see pricing, availability, or the start button.

Symptoms

  • Charger detail page shows a permanent loading spinner
  • Availability status not updating (shows 'Available' for hours at a busy station)
  • Price information missing from the detail screen
  • App shows 'No connection' error when loading charger details

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check your phone's internet connection

    Charging stations are often in areas with poor cellular coverage, like parking garages, highway rest stops behind concrete walls, or rural areas. Switch between mobile data and Wi-Fi, or walk to a spot with better signal and load the charger details there.

  2. 2

    Force-close the app and reopen it

    Swipe the EnBW mobility+ app away from your recent apps list, wait a few seconds, and reopen it. Navigate to the charger again. This clears any stuck network requests.

  3. 3

    Search for the charger by ID

    Instead of tapping the map pin, use the search bar in the app and enter the charger's ID or EVSE number (printed on the physical unit). This sometimes loads details that the map view fails to fetch.

  4. 4

    Use the QR code on the charger as a backup

    Many chargers have a QR code that opens a direct session start page. Scan it with your phone camera. This page is served by the CPO, not EnBW, and often loads faster.

  5. 5

    Clear the app cache

    On Android: Settings, Apps, EnBW mobility+, Storage, Clear Cache. On iOS: delete and reinstall the app (iOS does not offer cache clearing). This resolves issues caused by corrupted local data.

QR code scan not working

You scan the QR code on the charger with the EnBW mobility+ app and it either does not recognize the code, opens a wrong page, or shows an error.

Symptoms

  • App says 'QR code not recognized' after scanning
  • QR code opens a web page for the CPO's own app instead of EnBW mobility+
  • Camera does not focus on the QR code (too dark, code damaged)
  • Scan succeeds but the session start page shows an error

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Use the EnBW app's built-in scanner, not your phone camera

    Open the EnBW mobility+ app and use its QR scanner (usually in the top menu or via a scan button on the map screen). Scanning with your phone camera might open the CPO's own page instead of routing through EnBW.

  2. 2

    Clean the QR code

    Wipe dirt, rain, or ice off the QR code with your sleeve. Damaged or faded QR codes are common on outdoor chargers. If the code is badly worn, look for a second QR code on a different part of the charger.

  3. 3

    Turn on your phone's flashlight

    In dark or shaded areas, the camera cannot read the code. Most QR scanners (including EnBW's) have a flashlight toggle. Enable it for better readability.

  4. 4

    Enter the charger ID manually

    If the QR code will not scan, look for the charger's numeric or alphanumeric ID printed nearby. Enter it manually in the EnBW app's search function to find and start the session.

Cannot stop the session from the app

You tap 'Stop Charging' in the EnBW mobility+ app and nothing happens. The session keeps running, your car keeps charging (or has already finished but the session stays active), and you want to unplug and leave.

Symptoms

  • 'Stop' button in the app does not respond or shows an error
  • Session shows as active in the app even after unplugging
  • Charger screen says 'Session active' but your car is full
  • You are worried about accumulating idle fees

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Physically unplug the connector from your car

    On most chargers, unplugging the cable ends the session automatically, regardless of what the app says. Unlock your car's charge port (from the car's screen, key fob, or charge port button) and remove the connector.

  2. 2

    Wait 2 minutes and check the app again

    There is often a delay between physically ending the session and the app updating. The app depends on the CPO's system sending a 'session ended' signal back through the roaming chain. Give it a moment.

  3. 3

    Force-close and reopen the app

    Sometimes the app's session view gets stuck. Force-close it, reopen, and check your session history. The session may already be ended on the backend even if the active session screen was not updating.

  4. 4

    Press the stop button on the charger itself

    Many chargers have a physical stop button on the screen or housing. Press it. This sends the stop command directly to the charger hardware without going through the roaming network.

  5. 5

    Contact support if you are being billed for a stuck session

    If the session stays 'active' in the app for more than 10 minutes after you have unplugged and driven away, contact EnBW mobility+ support. They can close the session on their end and correct any overcharges.

App is in German and hard to navigate

The EnBW mobility+ app defaults to German. If you do not speak German, navigating menus, understanding pricing details, and finding settings can be frustrating.

Symptoms

  • All menus and buttons are in German after installation
  • Language setting not obvious in the app
  • Error messages appear in German, making troubleshooting difficult
  • Pricing terms and tariff explanations are only in German

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Change your phone's system language temporarily

    The EnBW mobility+ app follows your phone's system language. If English is available in the app, switching your phone to English (Settings, General, Language) will switch the app too. You can switch back after you finish.

  2. 2

    Check for an English option in the app settings

    Open the app, tap the profile or menu icon (usually three lines or a person icon in the corner), and look for 'Sprache' (Language) or 'Einstellungen' (Settings). Some versions offer English as an option directly.

  3. 3

    Use your phone's translate feature on screenshots

    On iOS, take a screenshot and use Live Text to translate. On Android, use Google Lens. This is useful for understanding pricing details or error messages in German.

  4. 4

    Consider an alternative roaming app with better language support

    If the language barrier is a persistent problem, apps like Shell Recharge, Plugsurfing, or Chargemap offer similar roaming coverage across Europe and have full English interfaces. They access many of the same chargers.

EnBW mobility+ App Tips

  • Always check the per-kWh price in the charger details before starting a session. Roaming prices vary dramatically depending on which CPO operates the charger.
  • Save chargers you use regularly as favorites. This lets you quickly check availability and pricing on your usual routes without scrolling the map.
  • Download the app and set up your payment method at home, not at the charger. The registration process takes a few minutes and requires email verification.
  • If the app is slow or unresponsive at a charger, it is likely a cellular signal issue. Try loading the charger details while you still have good signal, before you arrive at the station.
  • The app shows which CPO operates each charger. Knowing this helps you understand pricing tiers and lets you contact the right support line if the hardware has a problem.

Payment Tips

  • EnBW mobility+ bills everything to the payment method in your account. You will not need a card at the charger itself. Make sure your payment method is up to date before a trip.
  • Compare EnBW tariffs before committing. The free tariff has higher per-kWh rates. The monthly-fee tariff pays off if you charge frequently, especially at EnBW's own stations.
  • Invoices are available in the app under your account or profile section. Download them monthly for expense tracking, especially if you charge a company car.
  • Roaming sessions may take 1-3 business days to appear on your invoice. Do not panic if a session is missing immediately after charging.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Tesla Model Y charge at EnBW mobility+?
Yes. The Tesla Model Y uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by EnBW mobility+ chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 250 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Tesla Model Y at EnBW mobility+?
Charging a Tesla Model Y from 10% to 80% at EnBW mobility+ takes approximately 27 minutes at up to 250 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at EnBW mobility+?
EnBW mobility+ accepts app, RFID, contactless. Check the EnBW mobility+ app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

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