Audi A3 TFSI e charges slower than expected

Audi A3 TFSI e charges slower than the brochure suggested: setting realistic expectations

The number on the spec sheet and the number you see at home are rarely the same. That is true for almost every plug-in hybrid, and the A3 TFSI e is no exception. Before assuming something is wrong, it is worth knowing what "full speed" actually means for this car.

The plain-English version

The Audi A3 TFSI e is a single-phase AC car with an on-board charger limited to roughly 3.6 kW (16 A). There is no DC fast charging. There is no three-phase charging. Whatever the public charger or wallbox claims it can deliver, the A3 TFSI e will only ever pull about 3.6 kW on a good day.

In practical terms:

  • Empty to full from a 16 A Type 2 wallbox: roughly 3 to 4 hours.
  • Empty to full from a household 10 A schuko brick: roughly 6 to 8 hours.
  • Plugged into a 22 kW three-phase post: still about 3 to 4 hours, because the car cannot use the extra phases.

That last point catches a lot of new owners out. Paying for a 22 kW session does not make this car charge faster.

When slower than expected is actually a problem

There is a difference between "the car is hitting its ceiling" and "the car is sitting well below its ceiling". If you suspect the latter, check in this order:

  1. Confirm the in-car current limit. MMI lets you reduce charging current for weaker circuits. If it is set to 6 A or 10 A, you have artificially capped yourself.
  2. Check the cable. A budget or worn Type 2 cable that signals a lower amperage to the car will force the car to charge slowly. Switching to a properly rated single-phase 16 A 3.7 kW Type 2 cable from Voldt takes that variable off the table; the full Audi A3 TFSI e range shows matching accessories.
  3. Look at temperature. Cold-soaking the pack outdoors below freezing will slow the first hour of charging while the battery warms.
  4. Verify the wallbox is actually delivering 16 A. Some shared circuits dynamically load-balance and drop your bay during cooking or laundry hours.

Bottom line

For the A3 TFSI e, 3.6 kW is the headline number, not a starting point. If you are getting around that, the car is healthy. If you are getting noticeably less, look at the in-car current limit and the cable first, then the supply.