A 15m EV charging cable is the popular long-reach length for UK buyers — enough to handle awkward driveways, side parking, shared infrastructure and rural plots, while still being practical to coil and carry. It's the length you choose when 10m isn't quite enough but you don't want the bulk of a 20m or 25m cable.
When 15m is the right length
- L-shaped driveways — wallbox round the corner from where you park.
- Side or rear parking with the consumer unit and wallbox at the front of the property.
- Two-car driveways sharing one wallbox where the second car parks past the first.
- Detached garages with the wallbox inside, parking outside on the driveway.
- Shared parking bays in multi-residential settings where the wallbox isn't immediately adjacent.
- Workshop charging where the Type 2 socket is on the far wall and the car parks outside.
When to step up to 20m or 25m
If 15m is borderline tight for your layout, take the next size up — operating a cable at the end of its reach causes strain on the connectors and you'll be wrestling it daily. 20m and 25m add modest weight but eliminate the daily friction. A cable that just barely reaches is a cable that fails early at the strain reliefs.
When 15m is overkill
Don't buy 15m for a tight driveway where 5m or 8m would do. The cable is meaningfully heavier and bulkier — about 3kg for a 7.4kW 15m vs. 1kg for 5m. Coiling is slower. Storage takes more space. If the wallbox is well-placed, shorter is better.
Power and conductor specifications
At 15m, conductor sizing matters more than at shorter lengths but is still well within mainstream cable spec. Power tiers:
- 7.4kW (32A single-phase) — UK home standard. 4mm² OFC copper conductors at 15m are within spec; 6mm² is ideal.
- 11kW (16A three-phase) — three-phase domestic supply only.
- 22kW (32A three-phase) — premium / three-phase home and commercial use.
UK build quality checklist for long cables
Long cables magnify quality issues. At 15m insist on:
- OFC pure copper conductors — never CCA (copper-clad aluminium). The voltage drop and heat penalty on a 15m CCA cable is significant.
- TPU outer sheath — stays flexible in UK winter; PVC stiffens and cracks within 2 years.
- Reinforced strain reliefs at both connectors — long cables fail at the boots first.
- UV-stable colouring — cheap cables fade and the sheath cracks within 2-3 summers.
- Cable bag or carry strap included.
Storage at home — proper holder
15m of cable on the floor is a tangle. A wall-mounted cable holder beside the wallbox keeps it neatly coiled and off the ground — the difference between a 5-second daily plug-in and a 5-minute wrestle. If the cable lives in the boot for travel use, a proper cable bag protects the connectors and stops the cable shedding mud and grit through the boot lining.
Voltage drop and charging speed
A common worry: "will a 15m cable charge my car slower than a 5m cable?" The honest answer at consumer power levels is no, you won't notice. Voltage drop at 15m on 6mm² OFC copper at 32A is well under 1% — the car's onboard charger doesn't see a difference. Voltage drop becomes meaningful past 25-30m, and even then only on the highest power tiers.
Connector compatibility
Most 15m cables are Type 2 to Type 2 (UK and European standard). Type 1 to Type 2 15m cables exist for older Leafs and Outlander PHEVs but are rare — see the Type 1 to Type 2 collection if your car has a Type 1 inlet.