FLO EV, Electric Drivers' Life made easy
Charge on North America’s leading EV charging network:
• Quickly locate stations and see their real-time availability
• Save favorites and nearby stations
• Get access to our partner networks, all in one app
Download the app and charge right away:
• Load funds with your credit card, Apple Pay™
• Save money on charging fees with a free FLO membership
• Or pay on the go with your credit card: no account necessary
Seamlessly connect your FLO Home X5:
• Get real-time status
• Set a charging schedule to avoid peak periods and save money
• Track energy consumption and charging history
Our app is designed and built by teaming up with real EV owners. Use the contact link in the app to tell us what you think we should be working on, we’re all ears. We are on a mission to deliver the best charging experience to EV drivers on the road, at home, and at work.
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FLO EV Charging FAQ
Is FLO EV Charging free?
Yes, FLO EV Charging is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.
Is FLO EV Charging legit?
⚠️ The FLO EV Charging app has poor ratings and negative feedback. Users seem unsatisfied with its performance or features.
I use Flo since it always seems to be available at its many sites. The map locator and charge availability is accurate. Having the Flo card has made charging easier especially when there is no cell coverage like in Manning Park. It’s easy to load up your account and the phone support has been prompt and helpful, plus they are a Canadian company!
Overpriced
Check prices. Charge power is far overpriced in my area.
Does not work and no support
Own a Tesla, tried to use this at university of Calgary in the university district EV charger. The app had a lot of steps to install, got through them then the charger would not work. Tried different stalls, tried to match the numbers to the stalls. A complete brick wall and extremely negative customer experience. Tried to contact support, it’s all in French! Managed to switch to English and was stuck waiting and never got through. I want my money back and am frustrated and upset by how poorly this went. Contrast to the seamless and perfect charging experience that Tesla offers. Flo is awful and I’ve wasted $25. Please be better.
Flow chargers in Whitehorse Yukon
The chargers are not adequate for the cold temperatures. Anthing below 20kw is not enough power during the winter months November- April. If you don’t have a flo card the system is very difficult to get started.
Software
The software is the weak point. I usually just plug in and walk away. Here I have to navigate stupid software.
Bien mais quelques bugs
L’application va bien mais, bug quelques fois et on ne peut pas accéder à notre compte!
Per Minute charging is not trustworthy
I haven’t experienced any chargers that charge close to their charging capacity. This means the app wants to make you stay longer for the charge as the cost is per minute. The hand shake process and charging app are designed well and very user friendly though.
Still no Apple Wallet Support, no central pay
Flo needs apple wallet
Flo needs option to bill direct to cc like Tesla, Shell
Flo needs to add plug and charge capabilities
No particular order, some of these are easy some are worth the challenge
Questionable route planning
We have used a Flo home charger for 6 years. Great service, well worth it. The Flo app is OK, I would prefer to give it 2.5 stars: neither great nor poor. The route planning option which seems to come from a third party gives questionable results. So questionable, it gets less than 1 star, unless it was written as a student project… I suspect the internal algorithms are making questionable conversions. A planned trip of 250km and 1 charge along the way suggests a cost of about $50! I think not. It estimated an energy consumption of 99wh/km, that is about 1kwh/100km, I wish! At best we get about 11kwh/100km. If the app calculations were correct, as I read it, our 250km trip would use about 2.5kwh of electricity. The cost of charging would therefore be about $20/kwh. I am guessing the real cost is about $0.20/khw at the station. Either way, it seems to me there might be a factor of about 100 lost somewhere in the algorithm stream. Let us never forget the Gimli Glider incident of 1983. Check the conversion factors, then have someone else cross check the numbers before taking off. Then again, you might show me how to use it to get the correct values. I am happy to stand corrected.