Your inverter is not scheduled to charge the battery
Override Charge Slots
Your inverter is not scheduled to override the charging slots
Stop / Pause Discharge Slots
Your inverter is not scheduled to stop / pause the battery discharge
Force Discharge Slots
Your inverter is not scheduled to force the battery discharge
Legend
Charge Schedule
No active schedule
Charging not scheduled
Charging scheduled
Charging Override scheduled
Agile charging scheduled
Discharge Schedule
No active schedule
Discharge scheduledÂ
Stop / Pause discharge scheduled
Force discharge scheduled
Potential Changes to GivEnergy Cloud Service Access
What has GivEnergy announced?
On 31 March 2026, GivEnergy emailed a survey to users asking how much they would be willing to pay for access to its cloud services.
On 1 April 2026, GivEnergy clarified that the specific services that may be placed behind a paywall have not yet been finalised. However, the announcement suggests that cloud services and use of the API are likely to be included.
How does this affect third‑party services like MyEO?
MyEO and other cloud services (such as Octopus and Axle) use the GivEnergy API to access data from your system.
GivEnergy currently offers:
A commercial (paid) API
A home user API, which is currently free
MyEO uses the home user API, which is currently free for both you and me.
Will I need to pay for a GivEnergy subscription to keep using MyEO?
At this stage, it is not yet confirmed which services will require payment. Because of this, I can’t yet confirm whether a paid GivEnergy subscription will be required to continue using MyEO.
What happens next?
This information will be updated once GivEnergy provides clearer details on:
Which cloud services will be paid
Whether access to the home user API will be affected
Following the outage earlier this week, I’ve decided to move the website/service to a new hosting provider. While the outage prompted the timing, it wasn’t the only reason.
The key benefit of the move is increased computing resources, which are essential given that the site processes hundreds of commands every 30 minutes.Â
Migration Timing and Impact
The migration will start at 11 am Saturday, 16th November. Unfortunately, migration can take 24–48 hours, but it is often much quicker.
During this time:
Maintenance Mode:Â The site will be in maintenance mode (inaccessible)Â to freeze the database and pause account changes.
Automation: Scheduled automation should continue, but there may be a brief gap when the internet transitions to the new server.
Temporary Issues:Â Some features, such as charts and parts of the dashboard, may not work immediately after migration. These will be fixed as quickly as possible.
If you’d like me to temporarily pause your settings at 11 am to allow manual control, please let me know. I will also be able to access the settings during the majority of the migration for last minute changes.Â