Evnex E2 smart EV charger installed in an Australian garage

Evnex Charger Australia: Who They Are, What They Make, and Which One to Buy

By Marcus Webb Updated: 8 min read

Evnex is a New Zealand EV charging company that has built a dominant position in the Kiwi home charger market and expanded into Australia in late 2025. Their E2 range - three variants spanning $799 to $1,299 - makes a strong case for being the best-value smart charger range in Australia right now: OCPP and load management on every model, a 4-year warranty that outperforms every competitor at the price, and hardware engineered in-house rather than rebadged from China.

If you’ve encountered the name while researching home EV chargers and want to understand who they are, what they make, and whether it’s the right choice - this is the complete picture.


Who is Evnex?

Evnex was founded in Christchurch, New Zealand, by a team focused specifically on smart EV charging infrastructure. Unlike many EV charging brands that entered the market by sourcing hardware from Asian manufacturers and applying local branding, Evnex designs and engineers its own charger hardware in New Zealand. The distinction matters for two reasons: product quality control is fully within their hands, and the 4-year warranty they offer reflects genuine confidence in what they’ve built.

In New Zealand, Evnex is the market-leading residential EV charger brand - an achievement in a market that is significantly further ahead in EV adoption than Australia. New Zealand hit double-digit EV market share earlier and has a proportionally larger installed base of home chargers, which means Evnex has accumulated real-world field data and iterated on its hardware across a large number of installations before arriving in Australia.

The Australian launch in late 2025 brought the full E2 range to market through a growing network of certified installers. The brand’s NZ reputation preceded it - early Australian take-up has been strong, particularly among installers who value the OCPP implementation and the clear product differentiation across the three-variant range.


The Evnex E2 range: what’s available in Australia

Evnex sells three variants of the E2 platform in Australia. All three share the same core hardware: 7.4kW single-phase output (32A), OCPP 1.6, load management via CT clamp, app control, IP55 outdoor rating, and a 4-year warranty. The differences are targeted and purposeful.

E2 Flex - $799

The E2 Flex is the entry point: a socket-only charger where you provide your own Type 2 charging cable (a standard Mode 3 cable costs $50–$100). Every other feature is identical to the E2 Core - same OCPP, load management, app, warranty, and IP55 rating.

The E2 Flex is designed for buyers who want to minimise cost, or who already own a Type 2 cable. At $799, it is the most affordable OCPP-capable smart charger with load management currently sold in Australia.

Total installed cost: ~$1,250–$1,600

Full E2 Flex review →


E2 Core - $999

The E2 Core adds a factory-fitted 6m tethered Type 2 cable. Pull up, grab the cable, plug in - no cable management or boot rummaging required. For daily use over years, that small convenience accumulates.

Features are otherwise identical to the Flex: OCPP 1.6, load management, 4-year warranty. No solar integration.

At $999 with a tethered cable, 4-year warranty, and load management, the E2 Core is the strongest value proposition in the tethered smart charger segment. The Wallbox Pulsar Plus at $1,299 offers open OCPP at a $300 premium with a shorter 2-year warranty.

Total installed cost: ~$1,400–$1,700

Full E2 Core review →


E2 Plus - $1,299

The E2 Plus is the solar-capable model. It adds CT clamp solar integration to the E2 Core’s foundation - dynamically throttling charge rate to match real-time solar surplus, so you charge from free generation rather than exporting at a low feed-in tariff or buying grid power at full rate.

The CT clamp is inverter-agnostic. It works by monitoring whole-home energy flow at the switchboard rather than communicating with the inverter directly. SolarEdge, Fronius, Sungrow, GoodWe, Enphase - any brand works.

At $1,299, the E2 Plus is $51 cheaper than the myenergi Zappi 7kW ($1,350) and offers more features: OCPP 1.6 and dedicated load management that the Zappi lacks. The Zappi’s advantage is its more established Australian field history.

Total installed cost: ~$1,750–$2,050

Full E2 Plus review →


E2 range at a glance

E2 FlexE2 CoreE2 Plus
Price$799$999$1,299
CableSocket only6m tethered6m tethered
Solar integrationNoNoYes (CT clamp)
OCPP1.6 (closed)1.6 (closed)1.6 (closed)
Load managementYesYesYes
IP ratingIP55IP55IP55
Warranty4 years4 years4 years
Installed (est.)$1,250–$1,600$1,400–$1,700$1,750–$2,050

What makes Evnex different

1. The warranty

Four years, across the entire range, at every price point. At $799 for the Flex, this is remarkable. The industry norm at this price is 2 years. Warranties are a signal of manufacturer confidence - Evnex’s 4-year commitment reflects that they’re building to last.

For a charger handling daily sessions for 10+ years, the warranty period directly reduces the financial risk of owning the product. A fault at year 3.5 on a Wallbox is an out-of-pocket repair. The same fault on an E2 Core is covered.

2. OCPP on every model

OCPP is standard on the E2 Flex, Core, and Plus - including the $799 entry-level model. Many brands in Australia either don’t offer OCPP at all below $1,200, or implement it only on premium variants.

OCPP enables the features that make smart charging genuinely useful: off-peak scheduling that saves $200–$400 per year in charging costs, remote session management, energy monitoring, and future compatibility with evolving home energy management systems.

3. Load management at no extra cost

Load management - the ability to monitor total home current draw and reduce charger output before tripping the main switchboard fuse - is included across the E2 range without a price premium. For homes with older or limited electrical supply, this is a safety feature that also avoids the cost of a switchboard upgrade.

Competitors who include load management often charge $200–$400 more for the capability. Evnex treats it as standard.

4. In-house hardware

Evnex designs its own hardware rather than reselling rebadged Chinese components. This matters for:

  • Firmware quality - the OCPP implementation and app experience reflect Evnex’s own development priorities
  • Warranty delivery - they own the product and can stand behind it without blaming an OEM
  • Long-term support - hardware iterations happen on their timeline, not a third-party manufacturer’s

The OCPP caveat

Evnex’s OCPP implementation is closed. The E2 range communicates with Evnex’s own cloud platform - not with third-party OCPP backends like Home Assistant, SolarEdge energy management, or commercial charge point management systems.

For the typical household managing one charger, this doesn’t matter in practice. The Evnex app handles scheduling, monitoring, and load management well.

For users who specifically need open interoperability - home automation enthusiasts, commercial properties, fleet operators - the Wallbox Pulsar Plus (open OCPP 1.6) or Delta AC Max are the appropriate alternatives.


How Evnex compares to the competition

Evnex E2 CoreWallbox Pulsar Plusmyenergi ZappiGoodWe HCA
Price$999$1,299$1,499$850–$950
OCPPClosed 1.6Open 1.6ProprietaryOpen 1.6
Solar integrationNo (E2 Plus: Yes)NoYesWith GoodWe inverter
Load managementYesYesPartialNo
Warranty4 years2 years3 years2 years
Cable6m tetheredSocket6.5m tetheredSocket or tethered

Evnex wins the value comparison decisively on warranty. It matches or beats competitors on price. The only meaningful loss is to Wallbox on open OCPP - a trade-off that matters to a minority of buyers.


Which Evnex charger should you buy?

No solar, want the lowest price: E2 Flex ($799). Provide your own Type 2 cable.

No solar, want a tethered cable and best all-round value: E2 Core ($999). The pick for most households.

Have solar panels and want to charge from surplus: E2 Plus ($1,299). Beats the Zappi on features and price.

If you’re comparing to other brands rather than within the Evnex range, see our best home EV charger Australia guide for a full market view.


Evnex in Australia: practical considerations

Installer network: Evnex has a growing certified installer network, strongest in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide. For regional areas, confirm local coverage before purchasing through the Evnex website.

Support: Warranty claims and technical support for Australian customers are handled locally, not redirected to a New Zealand or offshore centre.

App: The Evnex app is available on iOS and Android. It handles scheduling, session monitoring, load management configuration, and energy reporting. Reviews are generally positive - the interface is clean and functional without being overcomplicated.

Compatibility: All E2 models use a standard Type 2 connector (IEC 62196-2). They are compatible with every EV sold in Australia that uses a Type 2 AC inlet - Tesla, BYD, Hyundai, Kia, MG, Volkswagen, Polestar, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and all others.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Evnex from?
Evnex is a New Zealand company. It was founded in Christchurch and designs and engineers its own EV charging hardware in New Zealand, rather than white-labelling products from overseas manufacturers. Evnex holds a dominant position in the New Zealand home EV charger market and expanded into Australia in late 2025 with the launch of the E2 range.
What EV chargers does Evnex sell in Australia?
Evnex sells three variants of the E2 range in Australia: the E2 Flex ($799, socket-only), the E2 Core ($999, 6m tethered cable), and the E2 Plus ($1,299, 6m tethered cable with solar integration). All three are 7.4kW single-phase smart chargers with OCPP 1.6, load management, app control, IP55 outdoor rating, and a 4-year warranty.
Is Evnex a good charger brand?
Yes. Evnex has a strong track record in New Zealand, where it is the market-leading home EV charger brand. The E2 range offers the best combination of OCPP, load management, warranty length, and price available in Australia. The main trade-off is closed OCPP (Evnex ecosystem only, not openly interoperable with third-party platforms) and a newer Australian service network compared to established brands like myenergi or Wallbox.
How does Evnex compare to Wallbox and the myenergi Zappi?
Compared to Wallbox: Evnex has a longer warranty (4 years vs 2) and includes load management at a lower price. Wallbox offers open OCPP interoperability. Compared to the Zappi: the Evnex E2 Plus ($1,299) is cheaper than the Zappi ($1,350) and adds OCPP and load management. The Zappi has more established solar diversion field history in Australia. Evnex wins on features and price; Zappi wins on track record.
Does Evnex have an installer network in Australia?
Yes. Evnex has a growing certified installer network in Australian metro areas. Coverage is strongest in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide. For regional and rural installations, confirm local installer availability with Evnex before purchasing. All E2 chargers require professional installation by a licensed electrician.
What warranty does Evnex offer in Australia?
All Evnex E2 chargers come with a 4-year manufacturer's warranty. Warranty claims for Australian customers are handled locally. This is the best warranty in the sub-$1,500 home charger segment - most competitors offer 2–3 years at similar price points.

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MW

Written by

Marcus Webb

Senior Energy Analyst

Marcus spent eight years as a solar and battery installer across Victoria and NSW before switching to full-time product testing and journalism. He has evaluated over 40 inverter and battery combinations in real Australian installs and writes to give households the numbers they need to make confident decisions - without the sales pitch.