Ohme Home Pro vs NexBlue Point 2: Proven Smart Tariffs or Future-Proofed Tech?
At a glance
Quick Stats
The Established Favourite vs the Tech-Packed Newcomer
At nearly identical prices — £535 for the Ohme Home Pro, around £530 for the NexBlue Point 2 — this comparison comes down to philosophy. Do you want the charger with the most proven smart tariff track record in the UK? Or the one stuffed with future-facing tech like V2G readiness and OCPP 2.0.1 support, from a brand still building its reputation?
In a nutshell:
- Ohme Home Pro: The UK's go-to charger for automated smart tariff savings, with a tethered cable and colour display for daily convenience.
- NexBlue Point 2: A feature-dense dark horse with V2G readiness, a 5-year warranty, and lifetime free 4G — but limited real-world track record.
Does the Ohme Home Pro Still Lead on Smart Tariff Savings?
Yes, and it's not particularly close — yet. The Ohme has deep, direct integrations with Octopus Energy (including official recommendation for Intelligent Go), OVO, and several other providers. You plug in, set a target charge level and departure time, and the Ohme handles everything: slotting your charging into the cheapest half-hour windows overnight without you lifting a finger. Thousands of UK Tesla owners rely on this daily, and it works.
The NexBlue Point 2's EcoPilot feature promises similar automated tariff optimisation, and on paper it sounds comparable. But "promises" is the operative word. NexBlue is a young brand, and EcoPilot doesn't yet have the breadth of confirmed energy provider partnerships or the volume of user feedback that the Ohme enjoys. If smart tariff automation is the primary reason you're buying a home charger — and for many Tesla owners, it should be — the Ohme is the proven choice. Check our tariff comparison guide to see how much you could save.
Is the NexBlue Point 2's V2G Readiness Worth It?
The NexBlue's headline feature is ISO 15118 and OCPP 2.0.1 compliance, which means it's technically ready for vehicle-to-grid bi-directional charging. That's genuinely rare at this price. Most chargers under £600 don't support OCPP 2.0.1 at all, let alone V2G protocols.
Here's the reality check: V2G in the UK is still in trial phases. Your Tesla can't do bi-directional AC charging today. When V2G does arrive at scale — likely within the next few years — the NexBlue should be ready without a hardware swap. That's a meaningful hedge if you plan to keep this charger for the long haul. But if you need smart charging that saves you money right now, in 2024, the Ohme delivers that today.
The NexBlue's 5-year warranty (versus 3 for the Ohme) and lifetime free 4G eSIM also add long-term value. If you're the type who buys for the decade ahead rather than the year ahead, these matter.
Tethered vs Untethered: A Bigger Deal Than You'd Think
The Ohme Home Pro comes with a 5-metre tethered cable (8m available at extra cost). The NexBlue Point 2 is untethered only — you'll need to supply your own Type 2 cable, which typically costs £80–150 for a decent one.
For a Tesla owner charging at home every night, a tethered cable is a small luxury that compounds. You grab the cable, plug in, done. No fishing a cable out of the boot, no coiling it back up. Factor the cost of a separate cable into the NexBlue's price and the Ohme actually works out cheaper for most people, despite its slightly higher sticker price.
On the flip side, an untethered socket is more versatile if your household has multiple EVs with different cable types, or if you occasionally want to take your cable with you for destination charging. But for a single-Tesla household, tethered wins on convenience every time.
The Ohme's Colour Display vs the NexBlue's Minimalism
The Ohme has a colour display built into the unit showing charging status, power draw, and session info at a glance. The NexBlue has no display — everything runs through the myNexBlue app. At 2.1 kg, the NexBlue is impressively compact and minimal on your wall, but you're reaching for your phone every time you want to check progress.
Neither approach is wrong, but if your charger is mounted in a garage or driveway where you pass it regularly, the Ohme's display is a nice touch. If aesthetics and a clean wall matter most, the NexBlue's tiny footprint is hard to beat.
Which Should You Buy?
Buy the Ohme Home Pro if:
- You're on (or switching to) Octopus Intelligent Go, Octopus Go, or another smart tariff
- You want a tethered cable for plug-in-and-forget convenience
- You prefer a charger backed by years of UK user feedback and proven reliability
- Solar diverting without extra accessories appeals (the NexBlue needs its Zen sensor)
Buy the NexBlue Point 2 if:
- V2G readiness and OCPP 2.0.1 future-proofing matter to you
- You want the longest warranty in this price range (5 years)
- You prefer an untethered socket for multi-vehicle flexibility
- You're comfortable adopting a newer brand with less track record
For most Tesla owners reading this today, the Ohme Home Pro is the smarter purchase. Its smart tariff integration is the best in the UK, it's tethered, and it has a deep well of real-world reliability data behind it. The NexBlue Point 2 is a fascinating charger with specs that outstrip its price — but it's a bet on the future, and the future hasn't quite arrived. If you want a broader view of the options, our best Tesla home charger guide covers the full field.
Detailed breakdown
Full Specs Comparison
| Specification | Ohme Home Pro | NexBlue Point 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Max Power Output | 7.4kW (single-phase only) | 7.4kW (single-phase) |
| Cable Length | 5 metres (optional 8m) | Untethered (use own cable) |
| Connector | Type 2 (tethered) | Type 2 socket |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi, 3G/4G (SIM included) | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, 4G eSIM (lifetime free) |
| Dimensions | 170mm × 200mm × 100mm | 235mm × 230mm × 107mm |
| Weight | ~3.5 kg | 2.1 kg |
| IP Rating | IP65 (fully weatherproof) | IP54 + IK10 (weatherproof + highest impact resistance) |
| Certification | OLEV/OZEV approved | CE (TUV Rheinland), UK Smart Charge Point Regulations compliant |
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