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Charging apps – still relevant?


How is it with charging apps — are they still relevant, and are there apps to calculate a route and charging stations along the way?


Yes — charging apps are still very relevant, especially for route planning and for finding/filtering chargers along the way. However, you often need fewer apps for payment now than a few years ago (more on that below).

Apps that are best for calculating a route + charging stops

Apps that are best for finding the “right” charger along the way (status/price/info)

Payment: roaming apps (one app that works across many networks)

Good if you travel between countries or want to avoid “100 network apps”:

Do you still need network-specific apps?

Sometimes, yes — some networks have their own discounts/subscriptions, receipts, business solutions, easier support, etc.
But: within the EU, AFIR requires new public chargers (incl. DC) to support ad-hoc payment and card/contactless payment, which reduces app hassle over time.

Recommended “minimum setup” (usually enough)

  1. ABRP (plan the long trip)
  2. ChargeFinder or PlugShare (check status/alternatives / “is this charger actually good?”)
  3. One roaming app (Electroverse or Plugsurfing) for payment across many networks


What’s the advantage of ABRP compared to the car’s built-in navigation?

Assistant:
Good question. Built-in navigation has become really good — but ABRP can still be better in certain situations because it’s built specifically for EV trip planning.

Advantages of ABRP compared to built-in navigation

1) Much more control over consumption assumptions

ABRP lets you adjust things that often matter a lot in real life:

Many car nav systems are more of a “black box” and harder to fine-tune.

2) Smarter charging-stop logic (optimized for time, not just number of stops)

ABRP often optimizes for shortest total travel time: sometimes more short stops on fast chargers instead of one long stop (or the opposite), and it accounts for typical charging curves/power taper.

3) Better planning for multi-stop trips / multi-day travel

Car nav often works best “here and now,” not as a vacation planner.

4) More freedom: filters by network, plugs, and preferences

You can be very specific:

Car nav can be limited to its own database/partners.

5) Works across brands and makes comparisons easy

If you have multiple cars in the family (or change cars often), ABRP is the same tool every time — and you can compare “how does this trip look with car A vs car B.”

When the car’s built-in navigation is often better

Recommended combo

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