Guides

Cupra Born Charging Guide: Charge times, speed and cost

Comments
Cupra Born

Click to expand

The Cupra Born is a five-seater five-door warm hatchback. Priced from $59,990 before on-road costs, it has up to 511km of claimed driving range and is available in a single battery and drive configuration.

The electric car can be charged at up to 11kW AC/170kW DC using a Type 2/CCS2 port.

How and Where to Charge a Cupra Born

Cupra Born Charging Station, Port and Plug Type

The Cupra Born charging port uses the CCS standard, which features a combined AC and DC inlet port. The top portion of the inlet is for the Type 2 connector, which is used for AC charging at home, work or at public chargers (e.g. shopping centre car parks).

For public fast/rapid DC charging, both the upper and lower sections on the inlet are used to support the high power output required. The Born CCS charging inlet is located on rear right side of the vehicle.

The Born can be slow, fast and rapid charged from public charging stations. In most cases:

  • Slow charging requires a three-pin to Type 2 cable, usually supplied with the car.
  • Public AC charging will feature a tethered Type 2 connector or may require a Type 2 to Type 2 cable.
  • Rapid DC charging uses a tethered CCS connector which is part of the charging unit.
Type 2 and CCS plugsType 2 and CCS plugs

1. Find a public charging station for fast and rapid chargers

Plugshare is the easiest way to find any public AC and DC electric vehicle charging station in your area. It displays a map and overall rating of each charger from check-ins and comments.

Additionally, use the charging providerā€™s app like Chargefox or Evie Networks to view the live availability of stations and check whether a stall may be out-of-action.

2. Connect charging cable to car

Driving up to the charger, ensure that your vehicleā€™s charging port, located on the front right, is nearest to the stall. This may require you to drive in or reverse into the charging spot.

Once parked, grab the appropriate charging connector type from the stallā€™s holster, open the Bornā€™s charging flap and any other caps, and firmly plug it into the vehicle.

3. Confirm charging has started

Use the charging providerā€™s mobile app or tap the RFID card on the stall to activate the charging session. You may need to press a start button on some charging stalls, too.

After a few seconds of communicating with the Born, you can see the charging status via the stationā€™s screen, the vehicleā€™s driver instrument display, or the "My CUPRA App".

Cupra Born Charge Time and Speed

Level 1 and 2 Charging (slow)

Level 1 and 2 Charging refers to charging from a power socket or a mounted charger. This is typically done at home, work or shopping centre car parks.

The Cupra Born is capable of charging at a maximum of 11 kW with its onboard charger, however this requires a three-phase power supply and charger, typically found at public car parks or business premises. The power supply in homes is likely single phase, meaning the maximum power you can draw from the onboard charger is ~7 kW.

Charging an Born using a portable charger and a standard 10A power will add 16km of range per hour. A full charge would take 36 hours. Upgrading the power source to 32A, will increase range added per hour to 68km and reduce the charge time to less than 8 hours.

Level 3 DC Charging (fast, rapid)

The Cupra Born can support maximum DC charging of 170kW, chargers with higher output than this will be throttled to this limit. Charging the Born from 10% to 80% at a fast/rapid DC charging station can be done in as little as 34 minutes, providing 408 km of range.

The following tables show the estimated time to charge the Born using different speed fast/rapid DC charging stations.

It is recommended to limit the charging at rapid chargers to 80% to preserve battery health.

Note that the times shown are only a guide only. Other factors that might vary the actual charging time of your car. For personalised estimates of the Born, use the zecar ev charging calculator.

How Much Does it Cost to Charge a Cupra Born?

The below tables show the estimated cost of charging the Born's 77 kWh battery at home using a standard flat tariff or a public fast DC charger.

Based on these figures, the Born's fuel costs are $4.2 to $10.1 per 100 km, depending on the type of charging. In general, home charging provides the cheapest per kilometre cost and public rapid charging tends to be around double the cost (per charge and per kilometre). This compares favourably to an equivalent petrol car which would cost $15 per 100km, assuming $2/litre for petrol.

Use the zecar EV charging calculator to find the cost and times to charge any EV using any charge method. The results can be personalised for different electricity costs and the level of charge required.

The Cupra Born's battery pack uses NMC chemistry. Cupra recommends setting the charge limit to 80% for daily use as per the owners guide.

Cupra Born Charging at Home

Cupra Born charging home station

Click to expand

The Cupra Born is compatible with almost all portable and wall-mounted chargers.

The Born comes with a portable charging cable, which can be used on any Australian domestic power point.

For faster charging speeds, you may want to consider a wall-mounted charger to reach the maximum 11kW charge rate the Born is capable of.

Home charging while taking longer will likely result in less degradation.

Electric Car Home Charging Guide
simple icon

Cupra Born Charging using Public DC charging stations

Cupra Born at Superchargers

Click to expand

The Cupra Born can be charged using all the major charging networks including some Tesla Superchargers and some select Tesla destination chargers.

Refer to this guide for all the key public charging providers including links to app downloads.

Excessive use of fast charging may accelerate the degradation of the battery due to the heat caused by fast charging.

Can a Cupra Born Be Charged at Tesla Supercharger Stations?

Tesla Supercharger Station

Click to expand

Yes, Cupra Born's can charge at some Tesla Supercharger sites. As of the latest update to this article, Tesla has opened up 30 of its 63 Supercharger sites in Australia to non-Tesla EVs.

Non-Tesla vehicles will be charged $0.79 per kWh for drivers of non-Tesla cars However, non-Tesla drivers can sign up to a $9.99/month subscription to reduce the cost to $0.66 per kWh.

āž”ļøTRY: EV Charging Calculator

Tesla supercharger sites can be accessed by non-Tesla EVs via the Tesla apps.

  • Download the Tesla app (version 4.18.0 or higher) for iOS or Android and create a Tesla Account.
  • Select ā€˜Charge Your Non-Teslaā€™ and find your Supercharger site.
  • Add your payment method, select a stall, unlock the adapter, plug in your car, and tap ā€˜Start Charging.ā€™
  • Select ā€˜Stop Chargingā€™ to complete your session.

Charging a Cupra Born Bottom Line

The Cupra Born charging speed is considered average compared to other electric cars. It provides average speeds for AC charging and above average speeds for DC fast charging. Check out our fastest charging car list to see how the Born ranks against its peers.

About the author

Author Avatar

Danny Thai

simple icon

Danny is a consultant and entrepreneur working at the cutting edge of the electric vehicle and energy transition. He is passionate about educating and helping consumers make better decisions through data. He is the founder of zecar and is currently the EV Innovation Manager at Endeavour Energy.

Stay up to date with the latest EV news

  • Get the latest news and update
  • New EV model releases
  • Get money savings-deal

Privacy policy