Comparisons·8 min read

Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) vs Easee One: Premium Integration or Best Value?

The Tesla Flagship vs the Lightweight Value Champion

If you're shopping for a home EV charger in the UK, you've almost certainly come across these two names. The Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) is the official charger from the world's biggest EV brand — sleek, deeply integrated with the Tesla ecosystem, and surprisingly affordable at £475. The Easee One, meanwhile, has quietly become one of the most popular chargers among UK installers, thanks to its featherlight design, built-in 4G connectivity, and a price tag that undercuts almost everything else on the market at just £405.

On paper, they look like very different propositions. One is tethered, one is untethered. One supports three-phase power, the other doesn't. One weighs 5.3 kg, the other a barely-there 1.5 kg. But both are OZEV-approved, both offer smart scheduling, and both will charge your Tesla (or any other Type 2 EV) perfectly well on a standard UK single-phase supply. So which one actually deserves a spot on your wall?

In a nutshell:

  • Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) (£475): The best possible charging experience for Tesla owners, with seamless app integration, power sharing for up to 6 units, and future-proof three-phase support.
  • Easee One (£405): The smartest budget pick, with built-in lifetime 4G, integrated safety protection, and the lightest, cleanest installation of any UK charger.

Spec Comparison

FeatureTesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)Easee One
Price (unit only)£475£405
Max Power7.4kW (single-phase) / 22kW (three-phase)7.4kW (single-phase only)
TypeTethered (Type 2)Untethered (Type 2 socket)
Cable Length7.3 metresUse your own cable
Smart Tariff IntegrationNo (manual scheduling only)No (manual scheduling only)
Solar DiversionNo (requires additional hardware)No
ConnectivityWi-FiWi-Fi + built-in 4G eSIM (lifetime)
Multi-charger SupportUp to 6 units (power sharing)Up to 3 units (dynamic load balancing)
Warranty4 years3 years
IP RatingIP44IP54
Weight5.3 kg1.5 kg
Dimensions353 × 152 × 124 mm256 × 193 × 106 mm

Power and Charging Speed

For the vast majority of UK homes running on a single-phase supply, both chargers deliver an identical 7.4kW charge rate. That translates to roughly 25–30 miles of range per hour, or a full charge on a typical 60kWh Tesla battery in about 8.5 hours — comfortably overnight. For day-to-day use, you genuinely won't notice a difference between them.

Where the Tesla Wall Connector pulls ahead is future-proofing. It supports up to 22kW on a three-phase supply, which slashes that same full charge down to around 2.7 hours. Now, fewer than 5% of UK homes currently have three-phase power, so this is a niche advantage. But if you're building a new property, converting a barn, or planning a commercial installation, it's a significant one. The Easee One is locked to single-phase only — there's no upgrade path here.

The Tesla also wins on multi-charger scalability. Its power sharing feature supports up to 6 Wall Connectors on a single circuit, compared to the Easee's 3-unit dynamic load balancing (which also requires additional Easee hardware). For households running two or more EVs, the Tesla's headroom is genuinely useful.

App and Connectivity

Both chargers offer app-based scheduling and monitoring, but the experience is quite different. The Tesla Wall Connector integrates directly into the Tesla app — the same app you use to check your car's battery level, pre-condition the cabin, and view your charging history. Everything lives in one place, and it's polished. You can set charging schedules, receive notifications, and benefit from over-the-air updates that add new features over time. As electriccarguide.co.uk notes in their review, the Tesla app experience is excellent for Tesla owners but more limited for non-Tesla users.

The Easee One takes a different approach to connectivity, and it's arguably the smarter one. It comes with a built-in eSIM providing lifetime 4G data at no ongoing cost. Wi-Fi serves as a backup rather than the primary connection. This is a genuine advantage for anyone whose charger sits at the far end of a driveway or in a detached garage where Wi-Fi signal can be patchy. As viablepower.co.uk highlights, reliable connectivity is critical for smart charging to actually work — and the Easee's 4G fallback means your schedules won't fail just because your router reboots overnight.

It's worth noting that neither charger offers direct smart tariff integration like the Ohme Home Pro, which can automatically follow Octopus Intelligent Go or Agile pricing in real time. With both the Tesla and the Easee, you'll need to set your off-peak charging windows manually through the app — perfectly fine for fixed-window tariffs like Octopus Go (7.5p/kWh between 00:30 and 04:30), but less ideal if you're on a variable tariff like Agile.

Build Quality and Installation

The Easee One is, frankly, remarkable from an installation perspective. At just 1.5 kg, it's lighter than most hardback books and can be mounted on virtually any surface without concern. It also comes with integrated Type-B RCD and open PEN protection built in, which means your installer may not need to add expensive extras to your consumer unit. This can shave £100–200 off the installation bill in some cases — a hidden saving that makes the Easee's value proposition even stronger.

The Tesla Wall Connector is no slouch in the looks department — it's a genuinely handsome piece of kit with clean lines and a premium feel. But at 5.3 kg and with an IP44 rating (versus the Easee's superior IP54), it's the heavier, slightly less weather-resistant option. As electriccarguide.co.uk notes, the Tesla requires an external PME fault device or earth rod for PEN protection, which adds to installation complexity and potentially cost.

The tethered versus untethered question is largely one of personal preference. The Tesla's built-in 7.3-metre cable means you walk up, grab the connector, and plug in — no rummaging in the boot. The Easee's untethered socket keeps the wall mount clean and tidy, and since every Tesla ships with a Type 2 cable, you're not left without one. If you have multiple EVs with different cable lengths or preferences, the untethered Easee offers more flexibility.

Price and Value

Cost ElementTesla Wall ConnectorEasee One
Unit price£475£405
Typical installation£400–£600£400–£600
Total installed (estimate)£875–£1,075£805–£1,005
After OZEV grant (if eligible)£525–£725£455–£655

The Easee One is £70 cheaper at the unit level, and the gap could widen once you factor in its integrated RCD and PEN protection potentially reducing installation costs. For a straightforward single-phase, single-car setup, the Easee represents outstanding value — it's genuinely hard to find a charger this capable at this price, as tinyeco.com confirms in their roundup of the best UK home chargers.

That said, the Tesla Wall Connector's extra £70 buys you a tethered cable (saving you the hassle of carrying one), an additional year of warranty (4 years vs 3), three-phase capability for future-proofing, and power sharing for up to 6 units. If you're a Tesla owner who values that seamless single-app experience, the premium is easy to justify.

Who Should Buy Which?

Buy the Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) if:

  • You drive a Tesla and want everything managed through a single, polished app
  • You have (or plan to install) a three-phase supply and want 22kW charging
  • You prefer a tethered charger with a generous 7.3-metre cable for grab-and-go convenience
  • You run multiple EVs and need power sharing for up to 6 chargers
  • You value the longest warranty available at 4 years

Buy the Easee One if:

  • You want the lowest upfront cost without sacrificing smart features
  • Your charger is far from your router and you need rock-solid 4G connectivity
  • You prefer a clean, untethered wall mount and don't mind using your own cable
  • You want integrated RCD and PEN protection to potentially reduce installation costs
  • You're on a single-phase supply and don't need three-phase capability

Our recommendation: For Tesla owners who want the most seamless experience possible, the Tesla Wall Connector remains the natural choice — the app integration is superb, the warranty is the longest in its class, and the three-phase option gives you headroom that the Easee simply can't match. But if you're pragmatic about value, particularly if your Wi-Fi doesn't reach your driveway, the Easee One at £405 with lifetime 4G and integrated safety protection is genuinely hard to beat. It's the charger we'd recommend to anyone who wants a reliable, fuss-free installation at the lowest possible price.

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For the full specs-level breakdown, see our Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) vs Easee One comparison page.

Read our full Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3) review or Easee One review.

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