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EV charging at home overnight via a wall-mounted home charger

Comparison · 2 picks

E.ON Next Drive Smart vs EDF GoElectric: 2026 Compared

By EV Tariff editorial team 7 min read

E.ON Next Drive Smart and EDF GoElectric are the two best-known overnight EV tariffs in the UK after Intelligent Octopus Go. Both target the same buyer — a smart-meter household with a home charger doing the bulk of charging between midnight and dawn — but they take different routes there. E.ON keeps the rules simple and the contract flexible. EDF goes harder on the headline pence-per-kWh and gives you a longer window to use it.

This comparison breaks down where each tariff wins, where each falls short, and which one delivers the bigger annual saving for the most common UK driving profiles.

At a glance

All 2 options side by side.

Electric vehicle plugged in for overnight charging E.ON Next Drive Smart 4.1 / 5 Home EV charger mounted on a wall next to a car charging overnight, illustrating an EDF GoElectric off-peak charging session EDF GoElectric 4.2 / 5
Price £8£6.99
Best for Best for mixed-load households who want whole-home overnight cheap rates without locking into a charger brand. Best for high-mileage drivers who can park inside the 11pm–6am window and want the lowest pence-per-kWh available right now.
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The picks in detail

#1 Best value

E.ON Energy E.ON Next Drive Smart

4.1 / 5
From £8
Electric vehicle plugged in for overnight charging

Bottom line. Best for mixed-load households who want whole-home overnight cheap rates without locking into a charger brand.

Pros

  • Whole-home off-peak — heat pump, dryer and dishwasher on schedule all benefit, not just the EV
  • Works with any home charger or a 3-pin cable — no compatibility list
  • No exit fees on the 1-year fix — switch out free if circumstances change

Cons

  • 8p/kWh off-peak rate is the highest of the two compared here
  • Fixed 6-hour window (00:00–06:00) only — no dynamic bonus slots
  • Day rate around 26p/kWh — high daytime users see less net saving
#2 Best overall

EDF Energy EDF GoElectric

4.2 / 5
From £6.99
Home EV charger mounted on a wall next to a car charging overnight, illustrating an EDF GoElectric off-peak charging session

Bottom line. Best for high-mileage drivers who can park inside the 11pm–6am window and want the lowest pence-per-kWh available right now.

Pros

  • 6.99p/kWh — the lower headline rate, post-April-2026 cut
  • 7-hour off-peak window (11pm–6am) — the longest mainstream UK EV tariff window currently
  • Smart Charging bolt-on adds £60/year in bill credit on top of the headline saving

Cons

  • £75 exit fee on the 12-month contract
  • No first-party smart-scheduling API — must lean on the charger's app for dynamic slots
  • SMETS2 smart meter is mandatory; install lead time can run 2–4 weeks

The headline numbers, side by side

Both tariffs are now in the sub-10p range that defines what "competitive overnight EV tariff" means in 2026 — a band the rest of the supplier market is being dragged toward by Octopus's incumbent position. The pence-per-kWh gap is meaningful but not dramatic: at 8p versus 6.99p, the spread is just over 1p. For a typical EV doing 8,000 miles a year (around 2,400 kWh of home charging at 0.30 kWh/mile), that translates to about £24 a year of pure rate-difference saving — useful, but smaller than the exit-fee gap if you're undecided.

The bigger structural difference is in the off-peak window. EDF gives you 7 hours (11pm–6am); E.ON gives you 6 (00:00–06:00). For a 7kW charger, that's the difference between a 49 kWh top-up and a 42 kWh top-up at the cheap rate before the meter ticks over to day rate. For most drivers replenishing 10–20 kWh per night, both windows are easily long enough. For households with two EVs, large batteries, or a heat pump running on schedule, the EDF window has a real edge.

E.ON off-peak rate
8p/kWh
EDF off-peak rate
6.99p/kWh
E.ON window
00:00–06:00 (6 hours)
EDF window
11pm–6am (7 hours)
E.ON contract
1-year fixed, no exit fee
EDF contract
12-month fixed, £75 exit fee
E.ON charger compatibility
Any home charger or 3-pin cable
EDF charger compatibility
Any charger (smart-scheduling via charger app)
Whole-home off-peak
Both — applies to everything during the window

Where E.ON Next Drive Smart wins

No exit fee. This is the single biggest structural advantage. If you move house, change cars, or simply find a better tariff six months in, you can walk for free. EDF's £75 exit fee isn't crippling, but it does mean the maths only works if you genuinely intend to ride out the full 12 months.

No charger restriction. Drivers using older, non-smart chargers, granny cables, or chargers that don't appear on a supplier's whitelist often hit walls with API-based tariffs like Intelligent Octopus Go. E.ON sidesteps the entire issue: any unit on a smart-meter half-hourly read can charge inside the window and pay 8p.

Simpler mental model. Six hours, one rate, one window. No bonus slots to monitor, no app to babysit. For a household that just wants to plug in at midnight and forget about it, this is the right shape.

Where EDF GoElectric wins

Lower headline rate. 6.99p/kWh undercuts E.ON by about 13%. Over a year of typical EV usage, that's a real saving — and it compounds for high-mileage drivers, two-EV households, and homes running heat pumps overnight.

Longer off-peak window. Seven hours instead of six means more headroom for charging interruptions, late returns home, or scheduling other heavy loads (dishwasher, dryer, hot-water immersion) inside the cheap rate.

Smart Charging bolt-on. The £60/year bill credit for enrolling is effectively a free win that further widens the gap with E.ON, assuming your charger supports the data-sharing requirements.

Open to existing customers. If you're already with EDF for gas or electricity, GoElectric can be added without supplier-switching friction. E.ON Next Drive Smart requires a full switch to E.ON Next.

Which tariff for which driver?

The decision comes down to four questions about your situation, in order:

  1. Are you confident you'll stay 12 months? If yes, the EDF exit fee is irrelevant and the lower rate wins. If no, E.ON's no-exit-fee structure is worth the ~1p/kWh premium.
  2. Do you have a charger that works cleanly with smart-meter half-hourly reads? If yes, both tariffs are equivalent on that axis. If you're on an older or unusual charger, E.ON's any-charger policy is the safer bet.
  3. How many kWh a year are you charging at home? Higher home-charging volume amplifies the EDF rate advantage. Below ~1,500 kWh/year, the gap is small enough that contract flexibility (E.ON) probably wins.
  4. Are you running other heavy loads overnight? A household with a heat pump on schedule, hot-water immersion, or two EVs benefits disproportionately from EDF's longer window.

For most single-EV households doing average UK mileage on a modern home charger, EDF GoElectric is the lower-cost choice in absolute terms over a full 12 months. For households where flexibility, simplicity, or charger compatibility matter more than the last pound of saving, E.ON Next Drive Smart is the cleaner option.

Bottom line

EDF GoElectric is the better tariff on paper — lower rate, longer window, an extra £60/year credit available. E.ON Next Drive Smart is the safer tariff in practice — no exit fee, no charger restrictions, simpler to live with day to day. The £75 EDF exit fee is what tips the balance for anyone whose 12-month plans aren't completely settled. Read each tariff's full E.ON Next Drive Smart review and EDF GoElectric review for spec-level detail, then pull a quote from both before deciding. Also worth comparing: our Octopus Go vs Intelligent Octopus Go and Intelligent Octopus Go vs OVO Charge Anytime breakdowns.

Frequently asked questions

Q01Which is cheaper, E.ON Next Drive Smart or EDF GoElectric?

EDF GoElectric is cheaper on the headline off-peak rate (6.99p/kWh vs 8p/kWh) and offers a longer off-peak window (7 hours vs 6 hours), so for a household that stays the full 12 months, EDF will be cheaper overall. The £75 EDF exit fee narrows the gap for anyone who switches early.

Q02Can I use any home charger with these tariffs?

Yes. Both tariffs work with any charger — and even with a 3-pin granny cable in E.ON's case — because the discount is applied via the half-hourly smart-meter reading, not via the charger's API. This is different from Intelligent Octopus Go, which uses a supported-charger whitelist.

Q03Do either of these tariffs include daytime bonus slots like Octopus Agile?

No. Both are fixed-window overnight tariffs only. If you want occasional daytime bonus slots when the grid has surplus renewable capacity, you'd need a dynamic tariff like Octopus Agile instead.

Q04Do I need a SMETS2 smart meter?

Yes — both tariffs require half-hourly smart-meter readings, which means SMETS2 (or a SMETS1 that's been migrated to DCC). If you don't have one, both suppliers will arrange the install, but EDF's lead time can be 2–4 weeks.

Q05What happens to the day rate?

Both tariffs price daytime electricity at roughly the typical UK fixed tariff (around 25–27p/kWh depending on region). The off-peak window is what makes the tariffs work — if you can't shift the bulk of your usage into it, the savings shrink fast.

Best overall EDF GoElectric
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