myenergi Zappi GLO vs VCHRGD Seven Pro: Solar Showdown at Two Price Points
At a glance
Quick Stats
Two Solar-Capable Chargers, One Big Price Gap
Here's an unusual comparison. The myenergi Zappi GLO has long been the default recommendation for solar households, and rightly so. But the VCHRGD Seven Pro has arrived at £432 with its own solar charging modes, a CT clamp in the box, and a feature list that reads like it should cost considerably more. So is the Zappi GLO's £599 price tag still justified?
In a nutshell:
- myenergi Zappi GLO: The gold standard for solar diversion, with an unrivalled ecosystem for whole-home energy management
- VCHRGD Seven Pro: Packs solar modes, load balancing, RFID, and OCPP into a package that's £167 cheaper
Is the Zappi GLO's Solar Diversion Worth the Premium?
If you're serious about maximising every watt from your roof, the Zappi GLO remains the charger to beat. Its Eco+ mode charges exclusively from surplus solar generation — meaning genuinely free miles. The standard Eco mode blends solar and grid power to maintain a minimum charge rate. No other charger on the market offers this level of granularity, and when you pair it with a myenergi eddi (for hot water diversion) or libbi battery, you've got a complete home energy system that talks to itself natively.
The VCHRGD Seven Pro isn't without solar credentials, though. It offers Solar Export and Solar Only modes, and the CT clamp comes included rather than as an add-on. For a household that wants to prioritise solar but doesn't need obsessive surplus-only charging, these modes do a credible job. The difference is depth: myenergi has spent years refining its solar algorithms, and the Zappi GLO benefits from that maturity. If your solar array is modest (say, 3-4kW), the Zappi's ability to trickle-charge from even small surpluses is meaningfully better. If you don't have solar panels at all, neither charger's premium solar features matter, and you should probably look at our cheapest EV charger guide instead.
Does the VCHRGD Seven Pro Punch Above Its Weight on Features?
Absolutely. At £432, the Seven Pro includes dynamic load balancing with a CT clamp, OCPP 1.6J compliance, RFID with two cards, OTA updates, a 7.5-metre cable, and IK10 impact resistance. That's a remarkable specification sheet for a charger that undercuts the Zappi GLO by £167.
The OCPP support is particularly interesting. It means the Seven Pro can connect to third-party energy management platforms, giving you flexibility if you ever want to switch away from the Powerverse app. The Zappi GLO has no OCPP support — you're locked into the myenergi ecosystem. That's fine if you're already invested in myenergi hardware, but it's a limitation if you're not.
The Seven Pro is also physically smaller (300mm × 180mm × 90mm versus the Zappi's 439mm × 282mm × 130mm) and lighter at roughly 4kg. If wall space is tight, that compact footprint matters. And the extra metre of cable — 7.5m versus 6.5m — is the kind of practical detail that makes a real difference during installation.
The App Question: Established vs Emerging
The myenergi app has improved significantly over the years, though it still feels more functional than elegant. Scheduling, solar monitoring, and tariff integration all work, but the interface won't win design awards. The Zappi GLO supports Octopus Intelligent Go natively, which covers most smart tariff users.
The VCHRGD Seven Pro uses the Powerverse app with its Raya AI assistant. It's a slick experience, and Octopus Intelligent Go support is present too. The concern is longevity: VCHRGD is a newer brand, and the app depends on a third-party platform. If Powerverse pivots or folds, that's a problem. myenergi, by contrast, controls its entire software stack and has been around since 2016. For a device you'll use daily for years, that stability counts for something.
Which Should You Buy?
Buy the myenergi Zappi GLO if:
- You have solar panels and want the most sophisticated surplus diversion available
- You're already in or planning the myenergi ecosystem (eddi, libbi)
- You want a brand with a long UK track record
- You might need three-phase support in future (22kW option)
Buy the VCHRGD Seven Pro if:
- You want the most features for the least money
- Solar is a nice-to-have but not your primary reason for buying
- You value OCPP flexibility and dynamic load balancing out of the box
- A longer 7.5m cable and compact unit suit your installation better
For the majority of Tesla owners — those without solar panels or with straightforward charging needs — the VCHRGD Seven Pro is the smarter spend. It does almost everything the Zappi GLO does at a lower price, with a longer cable and OCPP thrown in. But if you've invested in rooftop solar and want to squeeze every free kilowatt-hour into your car, the Zappi GLO's Eco+ mode and ecosystem integration justify the extra outlay. Check our best EV charger for solar guide for the full picture.
Detailed breakdown
Full Specs Comparison
| Specification | myenergi Zappi GLO | VCHRGD Seven Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Max Power Output | 7kW (single-phase) / 22kW (three-phase) | 7.4kW (single-phase only) |
| Cable Length | 6.5 metres (tethered version) | 7.5 metres (tethered version) |
| Connector | Type 2 (tethered or untethered) | Type 2 (tethered or untethered) |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth (optional 4G) |
| Dimensions | 439mm × 282mm × 130mm | 300mm × 180mm × 90mm |
| Weight | ~5.4 kg | ~4 kg (tethered) |
| IP Rating | IP65 (fully weatherproof) | IP54 + IK10 (weatherproof + impact-resistant) |
| Certification | OLEV/OZEV approved | OLEV/OZEV approved |
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