Comparisons·8 min read

Ohme Home Pro vs Easee One: Smart Savings or Best Value?

The Smart Saver vs the Value Champion

These two chargers sit at the heart of the UK home charging market, and it's easy to see why they end up on the same shortlist. Both deliver 7.4kW single-phase charging, both have built-in 4G connectivity so you're not reliant on a dodgy Wi-Fi signal reaching the driveway, and both carry OZEV approval. Yet they take fundamentally different approaches to what a home charger should do — and that difference could save you hundreds of pounds a year, or hundreds upfront, depending on which one you choose.

The Ohme Home Pro is the charger that obsesses over your energy tariff. It talks directly to suppliers like Octopus Energy and OVO, automatically shifting your charging into the cheapest half-hour slots without you lifting a finger. The Easee One, by contrast, strips things back to the essentials: it's the lightest charger on the market at just 1.5 kg, costs only £405, and includes a lifetime 4G eSIM with no ongoing fees. It's a brilliantly engineered piece of hardware that does the basics superbly well.

So which philosophy wins? Let's dig in.

In a nutshell:

  • Ohme Home Pro (£535): The UK's best charger for automated smart tariff savings, with direct Octopus Intelligent Go integration that can cut your charging costs to as little as 7p/kWh.
  • Easee One (£405): The lightest, most affordable charger available, with lifetime 4G connectivity and a clean untethered design — outstanding value for straightforward home charging.

Spec Comparison

FeatureOhme Home ProEasee One
Price£535£405
Power7.4kW (single-phase)7.4kW (single-phase)
Cable5m tethered (8m optional)Untethered (use own cable)
Smart tariff integrationYes — Octopus, OVO, and othersNo direct integration
Solar divertingYesNo
ConnectivityWi-Fi + 3G/4G (3-year SIM)Wi-Fi + 4G (lifetime eSIM)
Dynamic load balancingYes (pre-wired)Yes (up to 3 chargers)
Warranty3 years3 years
IP RatingIP65IP54
TypeTethered (Type 2)Untethered (Type 2 socket)
Weight~3.5 kg1.5 kg
DisplayColour screenNo screen

Smart Tariff Integration: Where the Ohme Earns Its Keep

This is the headline difference between these two chargers, and it's a big one. The Ohme Home Pro has deep API-level integration with energy suppliers including Octopus Energy, OVO, and others. If you're on Octopus Intelligent Go — widely regarded as the best EV tariff in the UK — the Ohme communicates directly with Octopus to schedule your charging across the cheapest overnight slots, typically around 7p/kWh. You simply tell it what time you need the car ready and how much charge you want, and it handles everything else mcnallyev.uk.

The real-world savings are substantial. Charging a Tesla Model 3 with a 60kWh battery at 7p/kWh costs roughly £4.20 for a full charge. On a standard variable tariff at around 24p/kWh, that same charge costs over £14. Over a year of average UK driving (~7,400 miles), that difference adds up to approximately £200–£250 in savings — meaning the Ohme's £130 price premium over the Easee pays for itself within about seven months.

The Easee One offers scheduled charging through its app, so you can manually set it to charge during off-peak hours if you're on a simple time-of-use tariff like Octopus Go (7.5p/kWh between 00:30 and 04:30). But it lacks the direct tariff integration that makes the Ohme so effortless. If you're on Octopus Agile with its variable 30-minute pricing slots, the Ohme will chase the cheapest windows automatically; with the Easee, you'd need to manage that yourself evenergyhub.com.

Solar Diversion and Energy Tracking

If you've got solar panels on your roof — or you're planning to install them — the Ohme Home Pro has built-in solar diverting capability. This means it can use excess solar generation to charge your car during the day, effectively giving you free miles. For households already invested in renewables, this is a genuinely valuable feature that the Easee One simply doesn't offer.

The Ohme app also provides detailed cost tracking per session, so you can see exactly what each charge costs you. Combined with the colour display on the unit itself, which shows real-time charging status at a glance, it creates a comprehensive energy management experience electriccarguide.co.uk. The Easee app covers the basics — remote control, consumption tracking, and access sharing — but it's designed more for simplicity than granular energy optimisation.

Build, Design, and Installation

The Easee One is a remarkable piece of engineering. At just 1.5 kg, it's lighter than most laptops and comfortably the lightest home charger on the UK market. Its compact Scandinavian design looks clean on any wall, and the untethered approach means there's no cable dangling when you're not charging mcnallyev.uk. It also has integrated RCD Type-B and open PEN protection built into the unit, which can reduce the amount of additional work needed in your consumer unit — potentially saving £50–£100 on installation.

The Ohme Home Pro is heavier at 3.5 kg but still compact, and it boasts a higher IP65 weatherproofing rating compared to the Easee's IP54. Both will handle typical British weather without issue, but the Ohme's rating means it's fully protected against water jets from any direction — worth noting if your charger will be on a particularly exposed wall.

The tethered vs untethered question is largely one of personal preference. The Ohme's 5m tethered cable means you simply grab and plug in — no rummaging in the boot. The Easee's untethered socket keeps things tidy, but you'll need to use your own Type 2 cable (one comes with most Teslas). If your parking spot is further from the charger, note that the Ohme's standard 5m cable may be tight; an 8m version is available at extra cost tinyeco.com.

One connectivity detail worth highlighting: the Easee includes a lifetime 4G eSIM with no ongoing costs, ever. The Ohme includes a 3-year 4G SIM. Both work independently of your home Wi-Fi, which is a genuine advantage over chargers that rely solely on Wi-Fi — but the Easee's lifetime inclusion edges it here.

Price and Value

Ohme Home ProEasee One
Unit price£535£405
Installation£400–£500£400–£600
Total installed£935–£1,035£805–£1,005
After OZEV grant£585–£685£455–£655

On pure hardware cost, the Easee One wins by £130. That's a meaningful difference, and for drivers who simply want a reliable, well-connected charger without the smart tariff bells and whistles, it's hard to argue with. The Easee's integrated electrical protections can also keep installation costs towards the lower end which.co.uk.

However, if you're on (or willing to switch to) a smart tariff like Octopus Intelligent Go, the Ohme's automated savings will comfortably recoup that £130 premium within the first year. Over a typical three-year ownership period, you could be £400–£600 better off with the Ohme — making it the cheaper option in the long run despite the higher sticker price.

Who Should Buy Which?

Buy the Ohme Home Pro if:

  • You're on Octopus Intelligent Go, Octopus Agile, OVO Smart Charge, or another compatible smart tariff
  • You have solar panels and want to divert excess generation into your car
  • You prefer a tethered cable for grab-and-go convenience
  • You want detailed per-session cost tracking and energy insights
  • You value the higher IP65 weatherproofing for an exposed installation

Buy the Easee One if:

  • You want the lowest upfront cost without compromising on build quality
  • You prefer a clean, untethered wall mount with no cable on display
  • You value lifetime 4G connectivity with zero ongoing costs
  • You're planning a multi-charger setup (expandable to 3 units on one fuse)
  • You don't have a smart tariff and want a straightforward, reliable charger

Our recommendation: For most Tesla owners in the UK, we'd point you towards the Ohme Home Pro. The combination of Octopus Intelligent Go integration and the Ohme is genuinely the cheapest way to run an EV in this country, and the annual savings dwarf the £130 price difference. If you're already on a smart tariff — or willing to switch — it's a no-brainer. But if you're on a fixed-rate deal, don't have solar panels, and simply want a dependable charger at the best possible price, the Easee One is outstanding value at £405 and we wouldn't hesitate to recommend it.

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For the full specs-level breakdown, see our Ohme Home Pro vs Easee One comparison page.

Read our full Ohme Home Pro review or Easee One review.

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