Charging times for the Hyundai Ioniq 6 by charger type. 10 to 80% is the standard comparison because rapid charging slows sharply above 80%.
Charging the Hyundai Ioniq 6 at home
A 7kW home wallbox is the workhorse. From 10% to 80% takes about 8h 13m, and a full charge from empty about 11h 45m, which fits comfortably overnight. On a cheap overnight tariff window, that is also the cheapest way to run the car by a distance.
A standard 3-pin socket manages around 2.3kW. A full charge that way takes roughly 35h 45m, so treat it as a backup rather than a routine.
The car's on-board AC charger takes up to 11kW, so on a 22kW public AC post it still charges at 11kW: about 5h 14m for 10 to 80%.
Rapid charging on trips
On a 50kW rapid charger, 10 to 80% takes about 1h 28m. On a rapid charger that can match the car's 233kW peak, that drops to about 27 minutes.
These are real-world estimates, not brochure figures: cars only hold their peak rate for part of the session, and the rate tapers steeply above 80% to protect the battery. That is why topping up to 80% and driving on beats waiting for 100% on every trip.
Cold batteries charge slower. In winter, expect the first rapid stop of the day to run behind these times until the pack warms up.
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